Hydrogen refueling stations technology trade-offs and deployment constraints in archipelagic settings

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Author listWigas Digwijaya, Handrea Bernando Tambunan, Ach Nurfanani, Andrew Cahyo Adhi, Prastowo Murti, Adhika Widyaparaga, Dini Nur Afifah, Burhan Febrinawarta, Witchuda Thongking, Muhammad Akhsin Muflikhun, Ardi Wiranata

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2026

Volume number30

eISSN2590-1745

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecmx.2026.101686

LanguagesEnglish-United States (EN-US)


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Abstract

Hydrogen refueling stations (HRS) are a key enabler for fuel cell vehicle deployment, but their feasibility is constrained by coupled trade-offs among throughput, energy use, safety, and supply-chain emissions. This review critically synthesizes recent advances in HRS architectures and core subsystems (compression, storage cascades, dispensing, and pre-cooling), with emphasis on the technical causes behind two persistent bottlenecks: carbon footprint and refueling speed. The analysis shows that gas type hydrogen (GH2) stations are primarily constrained by station electricity demand for high-pressure compression and pre-cooling during fast filling, whereas liquid type hydrogen (LH2) pathways shift the dominant burden upstream to liquefaction energy and downstream to boil-off and cryogenic operability. We further discuss how geography and demand density shape viable supply options (tube-trailer, pipeline, and LH2 delivery) and summarize implications for Indonesia, where hot ambient conditions and archipelagic logistics amplify both peak-load and delivery-chain penalties. The findings support pathway selection as a constrained optimization problem rather than a technology preference.


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Last updated on 2026-08-03 at 12:00