To reduce renewable output volatility and improve system integration efficiency, this study constructs a coordinated wind–solar–storage–hydrogen framework. The proposed MILP model innovatively integrates electrolyzer power-dependent efficiency and start-up dynamics into a coupled capacity-sizing and dispatch framework and differs from existing MILP models in refined dynamic constraint construction, multi-energy flow coupling, and practical engineering logic constraints. Refined mathematical models are formulated for core components, including wind and photovoltaic units, battery energy storage systems (BESS), and electrolyzers with power-dependent hydrogen production efficiency and operational dynamics. The electrolyzer efficiency peak at 0.25 p.u. input power is calibrated by industrial test data, and the optimization results show strong robustness to the slight deviation of this peak point. Independent control strategies are designed for each electrolyzer, and a capacity optimization model is formulated to maximize system performance. Simulation tests using wind and solar profiles from Northwest China show that the optimized system achieves a renewable energy utilization rate of 96.7%, a BESS capacity of 7 MWh, and a hydrogen storage tank of 3500 kg. Adopting a time-of-use (TOU) electricity pricing mechanism combined with hydrogen sales significantly enhances system efficiency, while expanding power and hydrogen transmission capacities further improves renewable energy integration. These results demonstrate the practical potential of the proposed integrated system for large-scale renewable energy deployment.
Qiu et al. (Tue,) studied this question.