Germany
Dynamic Operation of Fischer-Tropsch Reactors for Power-to-liquid Concepts: A Review
Apr 2022
Publication
The Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) is considered as a power-to-X (PtX) storage concept for converting temporally available excess energy to fuels or chemical compounds without the need of fossil resources. Fluctuating energy supplies demand a load-flexible energy system and a dynamically operating FTS reactor might be beneficial compared to traditional steady-state operations which rely on expensive upstream buffer capacities. This review provides an overview of recent experimental and simulation studies dealing with dynamic FTS operation and summarizes the main findings. The results are presented the two categories process intensification and PtX application. The review further discusses the experimentally difficult task of wide-ranging product characterization with a high temporal resolution. While dynamic reactor operation is often related to a complicated process control which challenges a save and efficient reactor performance the literature findings indicate that for dynamic FTS operation such concerns might not be as critical as assumed at least within well-known boundaries. Researchers further agree that dynamic operation might be a tool for process intensification. Especially hydrogen pulsing seems to be a potentially beneficial operating technique to remove accumulated liquid products restore initial catalyst activity and increase diesel-range productivity. The main challenge in this context is the prevention of high methane selectivity. A lucid future engineering goal seems to be the combination of the two applications: a robust and reliable FTS reactor in a PtX scenario that not only handles a fluctuating feed but uses such variations for process enhancement.
ISO 19880-1, Hydrogen Fueling Station and Vehicle Interface Safety Technical Report
Oct 2015
Publication
Hydrogen Infrastructures are currently being built up to support the initial commercialization of the fuel cell vehicle by multiple automakers. Three primary markets are presently coordinating a large build up of hydrogen stations: Japan; USA; and Europe to support this. Hydrogen Fuelling Station General Safety and Performance Considerations are important to establish before a wide scale infrastructure is established.
This document introduces the ISO Technical Report 19880-1 and summarizes main elements of the proposed standard. Note: this ICHS paper is based on the draft TR 19880 and is subject to change when the document is published in 2015. International Standards Organisation (ISO) Technical Committee (TC) 197 Working Group (WG) 24 has been tasked with the preparation of the ISO standard 19880-1 to define the minimum requirements considered applicable worldwide for the hydrogen and electrical safety of hydrogen stations. This report includes safety considerations for hydrogen station equipment and components control systems and operation. The following systems are covered specifically in the document as shown in Figure 1:
This document introduces the ISO Technical Report 19880-1 and summarizes main elements of the proposed standard. Note: this ICHS paper is based on the draft TR 19880 and is subject to change when the document is published in 2015. International Standards Organisation (ISO) Technical Committee (TC) 197 Working Group (WG) 24 has been tasked with the preparation of the ISO standard 19880-1 to define the minimum requirements considered applicable worldwide for the hydrogen and electrical safety of hydrogen stations. This report includes safety considerations for hydrogen station equipment and components control systems and operation. The following systems are covered specifically in the document as shown in Figure 1:
- H2 production / supply delivery system
- Compression
- Gaseous hydrogen buffer storage;
- Pre-cooling device;
- Gaseous hydrogen dispensers.
- Hydrogen Fuelling Vehicle Interface
Impact of Chemical Inhomogeneities on Local Material Properties and Hydrogen Environment Embrittlement in AISI 304L Steels
Feb 2018
Publication
This study investigated the influence of segregations on hydrogen environment embrittlement (HEE) of AISI 304L type austenitic stainless steels. The microstructure of tensile specimens that were fabricated from commercially available AISI 304L steels and tested by means of small strain-rate tensile tests in air as well as hydrogen gas at room temperature was investigated by means of combined EDS and EBSD measurements. It was shown that two different austenitic stainless steels having the same nominal alloy composition can exhibit different susceptibilities to HEE due to segregation effects resulting from different production routes (continuous casting/electroslag remelting). Local segregation-related variations of the austenite stability were evaluated by thermodynamic and empirical calculations. The alloying element Ni exhibits pronounced segregation bands parallel to the rolling direction of the material which strongly influences the local austenite stability. The latter was revealed by generating and evaluating two-dimensional distribution maps for the austenite stability. The formation of deformation-induced martensite was shown to be restricted to segregation bands with a low Ni content. Furthermore it was shown that the formation of hydrogen induced surface cracks is strongly coupled with the existence of surface regions of low Ni content and accordingly low austenite stability. In addition the growth behavior of hydrogen-induced cracks was linked to the segregation-related local austenite stability.
Pressurized Hydrogen from Charged Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier Systems by Electrochemical Hydrogen Compression
Feb 2021
Publication
We demonstrate that the combination of hydrogen release from a Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier (LOHC) system with electrochemical hydrogen compression (EHC) provides three decisive advantages over the state-of-the-art hydrogen provision from such storage system: a) The EHC device produces reduced hydrogen pressure on its suction side connected to the LOHC dehydrogenation unit thus shifting the thermodynamic equilibrium towards dehydrogenation and accelerating the hydrogen release; b) the EHC device compresses the hydrogen released from the carrier system thus producing high value compressed hydrogen; c) the EHC process is selective for proton transport and thus the process purifies hydrogen from impurities such as traces of methane. We demonstrate this combination for the production of compressed hydrogen (absolute pressure of 6 bar) from perhydro dibenzyltoluene at dehydrogenation temperatures down to 240 °C in a quality suitable for fuel cell operation e.g. in a fuel cell vehicle. The presented technology may be highly attractive for providing compressed hydrogen at future hydrogen filling stations that receive and store hydrogen in a LOHC-bound manner.
Fatigue Behavior of AA2198 in Liquid Hydrogen
Aug 2019
Publication
Tensile and fatigue tests were performed on an AA2198 aluminum alloy in the T851 condition in ambient air and liquid hydrogen (LH2). All fatigue tests were performed under load control at a frequency of 20 Hz and a stress ratio of R=0.1. The Gecks-Och-Function [1] was fitted on the measured cyclic lifetimes.<br/><br/>The tensile strength in LH2 was measured to be 46 % higher compared to the value determined at ambient conditions and the fatigue limit was increased by approximately 60 %. Both S-N curves show a distinct S-shape but also significant differences. Under LH2 environment the transition from LCF- to HCF-region as well as the transition to the fatigue limit is shifted to higher cyclic lifetimes compared to ambient test results. The investigation of the crack surfaces showed distinct differences between ambient and LH2 conditions. These observed differences are important factors in the fatigue behavior change.
Safety Considerations of Hydrogen Application in Shipping in Comparison to LNG
Apr 2022
Publication
Shipping accounts for about 3% of global CO2 emissions. In order to achieve the target set by the Paris Agreement IMO introduced their GHG strategy. This strategy envisages 50% emission reduction from international shipping by 2050 compared with 2008. This target cannot be fulfilled if conventional fuels are used. Amongst others hydrogen is considered to be one of the strong candidates as a zero-emissions fuel. Yet concerns around the safety of its storage and usage have been formulated and need to be addressed. “Safety” in this article is defined as the control of recognized hazards to achieve an acceptable level of risk. This article aims to propose a new way of comparing two systems with regard to their safety. Since safety cannot be directly measured fuzzy set theory is used to compare linguistic terms such as “safer”. This method is proposed to be used during the alternative design approach. This approach is necessary for deviations from IMO rules for example when hydrogen should be used in shipping. Additionally the properties of hydrogen that can pose a hazard such as its wide flammability range are identified.
Chemical Utilization of Hydrogen from Fluctuating Energy Sources- Catalytic Transfer Hydrogenation from Charged Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier Systems
Nov 2015
Publication
Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier (LOHC) systems offer a very attractive way for storing and distributing hydrogen from electrolysis using excess energies from solar or wind power plants. In this contribution an alternative high-value utilization of such hydrogen is proposed namely its use in steady-state chemical hydrogenation processes. We here demonstrate that the hydrogen-rich form of the LOHC system dibenzyltoluene/perhydro-dibenzyltoluene can be directly applied as sole source of hydrogen in the hydrogenation of toluene a model reaction for large-scale technical hydrogenations. Equilibrium experiments using perhydro-dibenzyltoluene and toluene in a ratio of 1:3 (thus in a stoichiometric ratio with respect to H2) yield conversions above 60% corresponding to an equilibrium constant significantly higher than 1 under the applied conditions (270 °C).
Effect of Corrosion-induced Hydrogen Embrittlement and its Degradation Impact on Tensile Properties and Fracture Toughness of (Al-Cu-Mg) 2024 Alloy
Jul 2016
Publication
In the present work the effect of artificial ageing of AA2024-T3 on the tensile mechanical properties and fracture toughness degradation due to corrosion exposure will be investigated. Tensile and fracture toughness specimens were artificially aged to tempers that correspond to Under-Ageing (UA) Peak-Ageing (PA) and Over-Ageing (OA) conditions and then were subsequently exposed to exfoliation corrosion environment. The corrosion exposure time was selected to be the least possible according to the experimental work of Alexopoulos et al. (2016) so as to avoid the formation of large surface pits trying to simulate the hydrogen embrittlement degradation only. The mechanical test results show that minimum corrosion-induced decrease in elongation at fracture was achieved for the peak-ageing condition while maximum was noticed at the under-ageing and over-ageing conditions. Yield stress decrease due to corrosion is less sensitive to tempering; fracture toughness decrease was sensitive to ageing heat treatment thus proving that the S΄ particles play a significant role on the corrosion-induced degradation.
Numerical study of the release and dispersion of a light gas using 3D CFD code GASFLOW-MPI
Sep 2017
Publication
With the development of the hydrogen economy it requires a better understanding of the potential for fires and explosions associated with the unintended release of hydrogen within a partially confined space. In order to mitigate the hydrogen fire and explosion risks effectively accurate predictions of the hydrogen transport and mixing processes are crucial. It is well known that turbulence modelling is one of the key elements for a successful simulation of gas mixing and transport. GASFLOW-MPI is a scalable CFD software solution used to predict fluid dynamics conjugate heat and mass transfer chemical kinetics aerosol transportation and other related phenomena. In order to capture more turbulence information the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) model and LES/RANS hybrid model Detached Eddy Simulation (DES) have been implemented and validated in 3-D CFD code GASFLOW-MPI. The standard Smagorisky SGS model is utilized in LES turbulence model. And the k-epsilon based DES model is employed. This paper assesses the capability of algebraic k-epsilon DES and LES turbulence model to simulate the mixing and transport behavior of highly buoyant gases in a partially confined geometry. Simulation results agree well with the overall trend measured in experiments conducted in a reduced scale enclosure with idealized leaks which shows that all these four turbulent models are validated and suitable for the simulation of light gas behavior. Furthermore the numerical results also indicate that the LES and DES model could be used to analysis the turbulence behavior in the hydrogen safety problems.
The Impact of Hydrogen on Mechanical Properties; A New In Situ Nanoindentation Testing Method
Feb 2019
Publication
We have designed a new method for electrochemical hydrogen charging which allows us to charge very thin coarse-grained specimens from the bottom and perform nanomechanical testing on the top. As the average grain diameter is larger than the thickness of the sample this setup allows us to efficiently evaluate the mechanical properties of multiple single crystals with similar electrochemical conditions. Another important advantage is that the top surface is not affected by corrosion by the electrolyte. The nanoindentation results show that hydrogen reduces the activation energy for homogenous dislocation nucleation by approximately 15–20% in a (001) grain. The elastic modulus also was observed to be reduced by the same amount. The hardness increased by approximately 4% as determined by load-displacement curves and residual imprint analysis.
Interaction of Hydrogen Jets with Hot Surfaces of Various Sizes and Temperatures
Sep 2019
Publication
The formation of hydrogen jets from pressurized sources and ignition has been studied by many projects also when hitting hot devices. In the paper presented at the conference 2 years ago the ignition was caused by glow plug a “point like source” at various temperatures distances of igniter and source and source pressures. In continuation of that work ignition now occurred by 1 or 3 platelets of size 45 x 18 mm at a temperatures of 1223 K. When hitting these hot platelets the resulting flame explosions and flame jets show interesting characteristics in contrast to the point like ignition where the explosions drifts downstream with the jet. Parameters of the experiments vary in initial pressure of the tubular source (10 20 and 40 MPa) distance between the nozzle and the hot surface (3 5 and 7 m) and temperature of the hot surface (1223 K). The initial explosions stabilize already at the stagnation point or the wake of the hot platelets. Furthermore flames propagate upstream and downstream depending on the pressure of the hydrogen reservoir and the distance. The achieved flame velocities vary strongly from 30 to 240 m/s. With all investigated hydrogen pressures strong reactions v > 40 m/s occur at platelet distances of 3 and 5 m. The higher values are mainly achieved with jets with 40 MPa pressure at 3 m distance. In these cases the initial explosion contours show irregular shapes. Various effects are found like explosion separation further independently initiated explosions and two parallel flame jets upstream as well as downstream.
Is Direct Seawater Splitting Economically Meaningful?
Jun 2021
Publication
Electrocatalytic water splitting is the key process for the formation of green fuels for energy transport and storage in a sustainable energy economy. Besides electricity it requires water an aspect that seldomly has been considered until recently. As freshwater is a limited resource (<1% of earth's water) lately plentiful reports were published on direct seawater (around 96.5% of earth's water) splitting without or with additives (buffers or bases). Alternatively the seawater can be split in two steps where it is first purified by reverse osmosis and then split in a conventional water electrolyser. This quantitative analysis discusses the challenges of the direct usage of non-purified seawater. Further herein we compare the energy requirements and costs of seawater purification with those of conventional water splitting. We find that direct seawater splitting has substantial drawbacks compared to conventional water splitting and bears almost no advantage. In short it is less promising than the two-step scenario as the capital and operating costs of water purification are insignificant compared to those of electrolysis of pure water.
Initial Assessment of a Fuel Cell—Gas Turbine Hybrid Propulsion Concept
Jan 2022
Publication
A fuel cell—gas turbine hybrid propulsion concept is introduced and initially assessed. The concept uses the water mass flow produced by a hydrogen fuel cell in order to improve the efficiency and power output of the gas turbine engine through burner steam injection. Therefore the fuel cell product water is conditioned through a process of condensation pressurization and revaporization. The vaporization uses the waste heat of the gas turbine exhaust. The functional principles of the system concept are introduced and discussed and appropriate methodology for an initial concept evaluation is formulated. Essential technology fields are surveyed in brief. The impact of burner steam injection on gas turbine efficiency and sizing is parametrically modelled. Simplified parametric models of the fuel cell system and key components of the water treatment process are presented. Fuel cell stack efficiency and specific power levels are methodically derived from latest experimental studies at the laboratory scale. The overall concept is assessed for a liquid hydrogen fueled short-/medium range aircraft application. Block fuel savings of up to 7.1% are found for an optimum design case based on solid oxide fuel cell technology. The optimum design features a gas turbine water-to-air ratio of 6.1% in cruise and 62% reduced high-level NOx emissions.
Development of a Model Evaluation Protocol for CFD Analysis of Hydrogen Safety Issues – The SUSANA Project
Oct 2015
Publication
The “SUpport to SAfety aNAlysis of Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies (SUSANA)” project aims to support stakeholders using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) for safety engineering design and assessment of FCH systems and infrastructure through the development of a model evaluation protocol. The protocol covers all aspects of safety assessment modelling using CFD from release through dispersion to combustion (self-ignition fires deflagrations detonations and Deflagration to Detonation Transition - DDT) and not only aims to enable users to evaluate models but to inform them of the state of the art and best practices in numerical modelling. The paper gives an overview of the SUSANA project including the main stages of the model evaluation protocol and some results from the on-going benchmarking activities.
Dynamic Simulation of Different Transport Options of Renewable Hydrogen to a Refinery in a Coupled Energy System Approach
Sep 2018
Publication
Three alternative transport options for hydrogen generated from excess renewable power to a refinery of different scales are compared to the reference case by means of hydrogen production cost overall efficiency and CO2 emissions. The hydrogen is transported by a) the natural gas grid and reclaimed by the existing steam reformer b) an own pipeline and c) hydrogen trailers. The analysis is applied to the city of Hamburg Germany for two scenarios of installed renewable energy capacities. The annual course of excess renewable power is modelled in a coupled system approach and the replaceable hydrogen mass flow rate is determined using measurement data from an existing refinery. Dynamic simulations are performed using an open-source Modelica® library. It is found that in all three alternative hydrogen supply chains CO2 emissions can be reduced and costs are increased compared to the reference case. Transporting hydrogen via the natural gas grid is the least efficient but achieves the highest emission reduction and is the most economical alternative for small to medium amounts of hydrogen. Using a hydrogen pipeline is the most efficient option and slightly cheaper for large amounts than employing the natural gas grid. Transporting hydrogen by trailers is not economical for single consumers and realizes the lowest CO2 reductions.
On Capital Utilization in the Hydrogen Economy: The Quest to Minimize Idle Capacity in Renewables-rich Energy Systems
Oct 2020
Publication
The hydrogen economy is currently experiencing a surge in attention partly due to the possibility of absorbing variable renewable energy (VRE) production peaks through electrolysis. A fundamental challenge with this approach is low utilization rates of various parts of the integrated electricity-hydrogen system. To assess the importance of capacity utilization this paper introduces a novel stylized numerical energy system model incorporating the major elements of electricity and hydrogen generation transmission and storage including both “green” hydrogen from electrolysis and “blue” hydrogen from natural gas reforming with CO2 capture and storage (CCS). Concurrent optimization of all major system elements revealed that balancing VRE with electrolysis involves substantial additional costs beyond reduced electrolyzer capacity factors. Depending on the location of electrolyzers greater capital expenditures are also required for hydrogen pipelines and storage infrastructure (to handle intermittent hydrogen production) or electricity transmission networks (to transmit VRE peaks to electrolyzers). Blue hydrogen scenarios face similar constraints. High VRE shares impose low utilization rates of CO2 capture transport and storage infrastructure for conventional CCS and of hydrogen transmission and storage infrastructure for a novel process (gas switching reforming) that enables flexible power and hydrogen production. In conclusion all major system elements must be considered to accurately reflect the costs of using hydrogen to integrate higher VRE shares.
Hydrogen-related Challenges for the Steelmaker: The Search for Proper Testing
Jun 2017
Publication
The modern steelmaker of advanced high-strength steels has always been challenged with the conflicting targets of increased strength while maintaining or improving ductility. These new steels help the transportation sector including the automotive sector to achieve the goals of increased passenger safety and reduced emissions. With increasing tensile strengths certain steels exhibit an increased sensitivity towards hydrogen embrittlement (HE). The ability to characterize the material's sensitivity in an as-delivered condition has been developed and accepted (SEP1970) but the complexity of the stress states that can induce an embrittlement together with the wide range of applications for high-strength steels make the development of a standardized test for HE under in-service conditions extremely challenging. Some proposals for evaluating the material's sensitivity give an advantage to materials with a low starting ductility. Despite this newly developed materials can have a higher original elongation with only a moderate reduction in elongation due to hydrogen. This work presents a characterization of new materials and their sensitivity towards HE.
This article is part of the themed issue ‘The challenges of hydrogen and metals’.
Link to document download on Royal Society Website
This article is part of the themed issue ‘The challenges of hydrogen and metals’.
Link to document download on Royal Society Website
Hydrogen Scaling Up: A Sustainable Pathway for the Global Energy Transition
Nov 2017
Publication
Deployed at scale hydrogen could account for almost one-fifth of total final energy consumed by 2050. This would reduce annual CO2 emissions by roughly 6 gigatons compared to today’s levels and contribute roughly 20% of the abatement required to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius.
On the demand side the Hydrogen Council sees the potential for hydrogen to power about 10 to 15 million cars and 500000 trucks by 2030 with many uses in other sectors as well such as industry processes and feedstocks building heating and power power generation and storage. Overall the study predicts that the annual demand for hydrogen could increase tenfold by 2050 to almost 80 EJ in 2050 meeting 18% of total final energy demand in the 2050 two-degree scenario. At a time when global populations are expected to grow by two billion people by 2050 hydrogen technologies have the potential to create opportunities for sustainable economic growth.
“The world in the 21st century must transition to widespread low carbon energy use” said Takeshi Uchiyamada Chairman of Toyota Motor Corporation and co-chair of the Hydrogen Council. “Hydrogen is an indispensable resource to achieve this transition because it can be used to store and transport wind solar and other renewable electricity to power transportation and many other things. The Hydrogen Council has identified seven roles for hydrogen which is why we are encouraging governments and investors to give it a prominent role in their energy plans. The sooner we get the hydrogen economy going the better and we are all committed to making this a reality.”
Achieving such scale would require substantial investments; approximately US$20 to 25 billion annually for a total of about US$280 billion until 2030. Within the right regulatory framework – including long-term stable coordination and incentive policies – the report considers that attracting these investments to scale the technology is feasible. The world already invests more than US$1.7 trillion in energy each year including US$650 billion in oil and gas US$300 billion in renewable electricity and more than US$300 billion in the automotive industry.
“This study confirms the place of hydrogen as a central pillar in the energy transition and encourages us in our support of its large-scale deployment. Hydrogen will be an unavoidable enabler for the energy transition in certain sectors and geographies. The sooner we make this happen the sooner we will be able to enjoy the needed benefits of Hydrogen at the service of our economies and our societies” said Benoît Potier Chairman and CEO Air Liquide. “Solutions are technologically mature and industry players are committed. We need concerted stakeholder efforts to make this happen; leading this effort is the role of the Hydrogen Council.”
The launch of the new roadmap came during the Sustainability Innovation Forum in the presence of 18 senior members of the Hydrogen led by co-chairs Takeshi Uchiyamada Chairman of Toyota and Benoît Potier Chairman and CEO Air Liquide and accompanied by Prof. Aldo Belloni CEO of The Linde Group Woong-chul Yang Vice Chairman of Hyundai Motor Company and Anne Stevens Board Member of Anglo American. During the launch the Hydrogen Council called upon investors policymakers and businesses to join them in accelerating deployment of hydrogen solutions for the energy transition. It was also announced that Woong-chul Yang of Hyundai Motor Company will succeed Takeshi Uchiyamada of Toyota in the rotating role of the Council’s co-chair and preside the group together with Benoit Potier CEO Air Liquide in 2018. Mr Uchiyamada is planning to return as Co-chairman in 2020 coinciding with the Tokyo Olympic and Paalympic Games an important milestone for showcasing hydrogen society and mobility.
You can download the full report from the Hydrogen Council website here
On the demand side the Hydrogen Council sees the potential for hydrogen to power about 10 to 15 million cars and 500000 trucks by 2030 with many uses in other sectors as well such as industry processes and feedstocks building heating and power power generation and storage. Overall the study predicts that the annual demand for hydrogen could increase tenfold by 2050 to almost 80 EJ in 2050 meeting 18% of total final energy demand in the 2050 two-degree scenario. At a time when global populations are expected to grow by two billion people by 2050 hydrogen technologies have the potential to create opportunities for sustainable economic growth.
“The world in the 21st century must transition to widespread low carbon energy use” said Takeshi Uchiyamada Chairman of Toyota Motor Corporation and co-chair of the Hydrogen Council. “Hydrogen is an indispensable resource to achieve this transition because it can be used to store and transport wind solar and other renewable electricity to power transportation and many other things. The Hydrogen Council has identified seven roles for hydrogen which is why we are encouraging governments and investors to give it a prominent role in their energy plans. The sooner we get the hydrogen economy going the better and we are all committed to making this a reality.”
Achieving such scale would require substantial investments; approximately US$20 to 25 billion annually for a total of about US$280 billion until 2030. Within the right regulatory framework – including long-term stable coordination and incentive policies – the report considers that attracting these investments to scale the technology is feasible. The world already invests more than US$1.7 trillion in energy each year including US$650 billion in oil and gas US$300 billion in renewable electricity and more than US$300 billion in the automotive industry.
“This study confirms the place of hydrogen as a central pillar in the energy transition and encourages us in our support of its large-scale deployment. Hydrogen will be an unavoidable enabler for the energy transition in certain sectors and geographies. The sooner we make this happen the sooner we will be able to enjoy the needed benefits of Hydrogen at the service of our economies and our societies” said Benoît Potier Chairman and CEO Air Liquide. “Solutions are technologically mature and industry players are committed. We need concerted stakeholder efforts to make this happen; leading this effort is the role of the Hydrogen Council.”
The launch of the new roadmap came during the Sustainability Innovation Forum in the presence of 18 senior members of the Hydrogen led by co-chairs Takeshi Uchiyamada Chairman of Toyota and Benoît Potier Chairman and CEO Air Liquide and accompanied by Prof. Aldo Belloni CEO of The Linde Group Woong-chul Yang Vice Chairman of Hyundai Motor Company and Anne Stevens Board Member of Anglo American. During the launch the Hydrogen Council called upon investors policymakers and businesses to join them in accelerating deployment of hydrogen solutions for the energy transition. It was also announced that Woong-chul Yang of Hyundai Motor Company will succeed Takeshi Uchiyamada of Toyota in the rotating role of the Council’s co-chair and preside the group together with Benoit Potier CEO Air Liquide in 2018. Mr Uchiyamada is planning to return as Co-chairman in 2020 coinciding with the Tokyo Olympic and Paalympic Games an important milestone for showcasing hydrogen society and mobility.
You can download the full report from the Hydrogen Council website here
The Impact of Hydrogen Admixture into Natural Gas on Residential and Commercial Gas Appliances
Jan 2022
Publication
Hydrogen as a carbon-free fuel is commonly expected to play a major role in future energy supply e.g. as an admixture gas in natural gas grids. Which impacts on residential and commercial gas appliances can be expected due to the significantly different physical and chemical properties of hydrogen-enriched natural gas? This paper analyses and discusses blends of hydrogen and natural gas from the perspective of combustion science. The admixture of hydrogen into natural gas changes the properties of the fuel gas. Depending on the combustion system burner design and other boundary conditions these changes may cause higher combustion temperatures and laminar combustion velocities while changing flame positions and shapes are also to be expected. For appliances that are designed for natural gas these effects may cause risk of flashback reduced operational safety material deterioration higher nitrogen oxides emissions (NOx) and efficiency losses. Theoretical considerations and first measurements indicate that the effects of hydrogen admixture on combustion temperatures and the laminar combustion velocities are often largely mitigated by a shift towards higher air excess ratios in the absence of combustion control systems but also that common combustion control technologies may be unable to react properly to the presence of hydrogen in the fuel.
Can Industry Keep Gas Distribution Networks Alive? Future Development of the Gas Network in a Decarbonized World: A German Case Study
Dec 2022
Publication
With the growing need for decarbonization the future gas demand will decrease and the necessity of a gas distribution network is at stake. A remaining industrial gas demand on the distribution network level could lead to industry becoming the main gas consumer supplied by the gas distribution network leading to the question: can industry keep the gas distribution network alive? To answer this research question a three-stage analysis was conducted starting from a rough estimate of average gas demand per production site and then increasing the level of detail. This paper shows that about one third of the German industry sites investigated are currently supplied by the gas distribution network. While the steel industry offers new opportunities the food and tobacco industry alone cannot sustain the gas distribution network by itself.
Sector Coupling Potential of Wind-based Hydrogen Production and Fuel Cell Train Operation in Regional Rail Transport in Berlin and Brandenburg
Jan 2021
Publication
As the transport sector is ought to be decarbonized fuel-cell-powered trains are a viable zero-tailpipe technology alternative to the widely employed diesel multiple units in regional railway service on non-electrified tracks. Carbon-free hydrogen can be provided by water-electrolysis from renewable energies. In this study we introduce an approach to assess the potential of wind-based hydrogen for use in adjacent regional rail transport by applying a GIS approach in conjunction with a site-level cost model. In Brandenburg about 10.1 million train-km annually could be switched to fuel cell electric train operation. This relates to a diesel consumption of appr. 9.5 million liters today. If fuel cell trains would be employed that translated to 2198 annual tons hydrogen annually. At favorable sites hydrogen costs of approx. 6.40 €/kg - including costs of hydrogen refueling stations - could be achieved. Making excess hydrogen available for other consumers would further decrease hydrogen production costs.
Safety Concept of Nuclear Cogeneration of Hydrogen and Electricity
Oct 2015
Publication
There is a significant potential for nuclear combined heat and power (CHP) in quite a number of industries. The reactor concepts of the next generation would be capable to open up in particular the high temperature heat market where nuclear energy is applicable to the production processes of hydrogen (or liquid fuels) by steam reforming or water splitting. Due to the need to locate a nuclear facility near the hydrogen plant an overall safety concept has to deal with the question of safety of the combined nuclear/industrial system by taking into account a qualitatively new class of events characterized by interacting influences. Specific requirements will be determined by such factors as the reactor type the nature of the industrial process the separation distances of the industrial facility and population centers from the nuclear plant and prevailing public attitudes. Based on the Japanese concept of the GTHTR300C nuclear reactor for electricity and hydrogen cogeneration theoretical studies were conducted on the release dispersive transport and explosion of a hydrogen cloud in the atmosphere for the sake of assessing the required minimum separation distance to avoid any risk to the nuclear plant's safety systems. In the case of sulfur-iodine water splitting the accidental release of process intermediates including large amounts of sulfur dioxide sulfur trioxide and sulfuric acid need to be investigated as well to estimate the potential risk to nuclear installations like the operators' room and estimate appropriate separation distances against toxic gas propagation. Results of respective simulation studies will be presented.
Influence of Microstructural Morphology on Hydrogen Embrittlement in a Medium-Mn Steel Fe-12Mn-3Al-0.05C
Aug 2019
Publication
The ultrafine-grained (UFG) duplex microstructure of medium-Mn steel consists of a considerable amount of austenite and ferrite/martensite achieving an extraordinary balance of mechanical properties and alloying cost. In the present work two heat treatment routes were performed on a cold-rolled medium-Mn steel Fe-12Mn-3Al-0.05C (wt.%) to achieve comparable mechanical properties with different microstructural morphologies. One heat treatment was merely austenite-reverted-transformation (ART) annealing and the other one was a successive combination of austenitization (AUS) and ART annealing. The distinct responses to hydrogen ingression were characterized and discussed. The UFG martensite colonies produced by the AUS + ART process were found to be detrimental to ductility regardless of the amount of hydrogen which is likely attributed to the reduced lattice bonding strength according to the H-enhanced decohesion (HEDE) mechanism. With an increase in the hydrogen amount the mixed microstructure (granular + lamellar) in the ART specimen revealed a clear embrittlement transition with the possible contribution of HEDE and H-enhanced localized plasticity (HELP) mechanisms.
Linking Ab Initio Data on Hydrogen and Carbon in Steel to Statistical and Continuum Descriptions
Mar 2018
Publication
We present a selection of scale transfer approaches from the electronic to the continuum regime for topics relevant to hydrogen embrittlement. With a focus on grain boundary related hydrogen embrittlement we discuss the scale transfer for the dependence of the carbon solution behavior in steel on elastic effects and the hydrogen solution in austenitic bulk regions depending on Al content. We introduce an approximative scheme to estimate grain boundary energies for varying carbon and hydrogen population. We employ this approach for a discussion of the suppressing influence of Al on the substitution of carbon with hydrogen at grain boundaries which is an assumed mechanism for grain boundary hydrogen embrittlement. Finally we discuss the dependence of hydride formation on the grain boundary stiffness
The Curious Case of the Conflicting Roles of Hydrogen in Global Energy Scenarios
Oct 2019
Publication
As energy systems transition from fossil-based to low-carbon they face many challenges particularly concerning energy security and flexibility. Hydrogen may help to overcome these challenges with potential as a transport fuel for heating energy storage conversion to electricity and in industry. Despite these opportunities hydrogen has historically had a limited role in influential global energy scenarios. Whilst more recent studies are beginning to include hydrogen the role it plays in different scenarios is extremely inconsistent. In this perspective paper reasons for this inconsistency are explored considering the modelling approach behind the scenario scenario design and data assumptions. We argue that energy systems are becoming increasingly complex and it is within these complexities that new technologies such as hydrogen emerge. Developing a global energy scenario that represents these complexities is challenging and in this paper we provide recommendations to help ensure that emerging technologies such as hydrogen are appropriately represented. These recommendations include: using the right modelling tools whilst knowing the limits of the model; including the right sectors and technologies; having an appropriate level of ambition; and making realistic data assumptions. Above all transparency is essential and global scenarios must do more to make available the modelling methods and data assumptions used.
Tetrahydroborates: Development and Potential as Hydrogen Storage Medium
Oct 2017
Publication
The use of fossil fuels as an energy supply becomes increasingly problematic from the point of view of both environmental emissions and energy sustainability. As an alternative hydrogen is widely regarded as a key element for a potential energy solution. However differently from fossil fuels such as oil gas and coal the production of hydrogen requires energy. Alternative and intermittent renewable energy sources such as solar power wind power etc. present multiple advantages for the production of hydrogen. On the one hand the renewable sources contribute to a remarkable reduction of pollutants released to the air and on the other hand they significantly enhance the sustainability of energy supply. In addition the storage of energy in form of hydrogen has a huge potential to balance an effective and synergetic utilization of renewable energy sources. In this regard hydrogen storage technology is a key technology towards the practical application of hydrogen as “energy carrier”. Among the methods available to store hydrogen solid-state storage is the most attractive alternative from both the safety and the volumetric energy density points of view. Because of their appealing hydrogen content complex hydrides and complex hydride-based systems have attracted considerable attention as potential energy vectors for mobile and stationary applications. In this review the progresses made over the last century on the synthesis and development of tetrahydroborates and tetrahydroborate-based systems for hydrogen storage purposes are summarized.
Healthy Power: Reimagining Hospitals as Sustainable Energy Hubs
Oct 2020
Publication
Human health is a key pillar of modern conceptions of sustainability. Humanity pays a considerable price for its dependence on fossil-fueled energy systems which must be addressed for sustainable urban development. Public hospitals are focal points for communities and have an opportunity to lead the transition to renewable energy. We have reimagined the healthcare energy ecosystem with sustainable technologies to transform hospitals into networked clean energy hubs. In this concept design hydrogen is used to couple energy with other on-site medical resource demands and vanadium flow battery technology is used to engage the public with energy systems. This multi-generation system would reduce harmful emissions while providing reliable services tackling the linked issues of human and environmental health.
Critical Materials for Water Electrolysers at the Example of the Energy Transition in Germany
Feb 2021
Publication
The present work aims to identify critical materials in water electrolysers with potential future supply constraints. The expected rise in demand for green hydrogen as well as the respective implications on material availability are assessed by conducting a case study for Germany. Furthermore the recycling of end‐of‐life (EoL) electrolysers is evaluated concerning its potential in ensuring the sustainable supply of the considered materials. As critical materials bear the risk of raising production costs of electrolysers substantially this article examines the readiness of this technology for industrialisation from a material perspective. Except for titanium the indicators for each assessed material are scored with a moderate to high (platinum) or mostly high (iridium scandium and yttrium) supply risk. Hence the availability of these materials bears the risk of hampering the scale‐up of electrolysis capacity. Although conventional recycling pathways for platinum iridium and titanium already exist secondary material from EoL electrolysers will not reduce the dependence on primary resources significantly within the period under consideration—from 2020 until 2050. Notably the materials identified as critical are used in PEM and high temperature electrolysis whereas materials in alkaline electrolysis are not exposed to significant supply risks.
Development of a Flashback Correlation for Burner-stabilized Hydrogen-air Premixed Flames
Feb 2022
Publication
With a growing need for replacing fossil fuels with cleaner alternatives hydrogen has emerged as a viable candidate for providing heat and power. However stable and safe combustion of hydrogen is not simple and as such a number of key issues have been identified that need to be understood for a safe design of combustion chambers. One such issue is the higher propensity of hydrogen flames to flashback compared to that for methane flames. The flashback problem is coupled with higher burner temperatures that could cause strong thermal stresses in burners and could hinder their performance. In order to systematically investigate flashback in premixed hydrogen-air flames for finding a global flashback criteria in this study we use numerical simulations as a basic tool to study flashback limits of slit burners. Flashback limits are found for varying geometrical parameters and equivalence ratios and the sensitivity of each parameter on the flashback limit and burner temperatures are identified and analyzed. It is shown that the conventional flashback correlation with critical velocity gradient does not collapse the flashback data as it does not take into account stretch induced preferential diffusion effects. A new Karlovitz number definition is introduced with physical insights that collapses the flashback data at all tested conditions in an excellent manner.
Hydrogen Storage: Thermodynamic Analysis of Alkyl-Quinolines and Alkyl-Pyridines as Potential Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers (LOHC)
Dec 2021
Publication
The liquid organic hydrogen carriers (LOHC) are aromatic molecules which can be considered as an attractive option for the storage and transport of hydrogen. A considerable amount of hydrogen up to 7–8% wt. can be loaded and unloaded with a reversible chemical reaction. Substituted quinolines and pyridines are available from petroleum coal processing and wood preservation or they can be synthesized from aniline. Quinolines and pyridines can be considered as potential LOHC systems provided they have favorable thermodynamic properties which were the focus of this current study. The absolute vapor pressures of methyl-quinolines were measured using the transpiration method. The standard molar enthalpies of vaporization of alkyl-substituted quinolines and pyridines were derived from the vapor pressure temperature dependencies. Thermodynamic data on vaporization and formation enthalpies available in the literature were collected evaluated and combined with our own experimental results. The theoretical standard molar gas-phase enthalpies of formation of quinolines and pyridines calculated using the quantum-chemical G4 methods agreed well with the evaluated experimental data. Reliable standard molar enthalpies of formation in the liquid phase were derived by combining high-level quantum chemistry values of gas-phase enthalpies of formation with experimentally determined enthalpies of vaporization. The liquid-phase hydrogenation/dehydrogenation reaction enthalpies of alkyl-substituted pyridines and quinolines were calculated and compared with the data for other potential liquid organic hydrogen carriers. The comparatively low enthalpies of reaction make these heteroaromatics a seminal LOHC system.
Guidelines and Recommendations for Indoor Use of Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Systems
Oct 2015
Publication
Deborah Houssin-Agbomson,
Simon Jallais,
Elena Vyazmina,
Guy Dang-Nhu,
Gilles Bernard-Michel,
Mike Kuznetsov,
Vladimir V. Molkov,
Boris Chernyavsky,
Volodymyr V. Shentsov,
Dmitry Makarov,
Randy Dey,
Philip Hooker,
Daniele Baraldi,
Evelyn Weidner,
Daniele Melideo,
Valerio Palmisano,
Alexandros G. Venetsanos,
Jan Der Kinderen and
Béatrice L’Hostis
Hydrogen energy applications often require that systems are used indoors (e.g. industrial trucks for materials handling in a warehouse facility fuel cells located in a room or hydrogen stored and distributed from a gas cabinet). It may also be necessary or desirable to locate some hydrogen system components/equipment inside indoor or outdoor enclosures for security or safety reasons to isolate them from the end-user and the public or from weather conditions.<br/>Using of hydrogen in confined environments requires detailed assessments of hazards and associated risks including potential risk prevention and mitigation features. The release of hydrogen can potentially lead to the accumulation of hydrogen and the formation of a flammable hydrogen-air mixture or can result in jet-fires. Within Hyindoor European Project carried out for the EU Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Joint Undertaking safety design guidelines and engineering tools have been developed to prevent and mitigate hazardous consequences of hydrogen release in confined environments. Three main areas are considered: Hydrogen release conditions and accumulation vented deflagrations jet fires and including under-ventilated flame regimes (e.g. extinguishment or oscillating flames and steady burns). Potential RCS recommendations are also identified.
The Role of Trust and Familiarity in Risk Communication
Sep 2009
Publication
In socio-economics it is well known that the success of an innovation process not only depends upon the technological innovation itself or the improvement of economic and institutional system boundaries but also on the public acceptance of the innovation. The public acceptance can as seen with genetic engineering for agriculture be an obstacle for the development and introduction of a new and innovative idea. In respect to hydrogen technologies this means that the investigation compilation and communication of scientific risk assessments are not sufficient to enhance or generate public acceptance. Moreover psychological social and cultural aspects of risk perception have to be considered when introducing new technologies. Especially trust and familiarity play an important role for risk perception and thus public acceptance of new technologies.
Hydrogen Safety- New Challenges Based on BMW Hydrogen 7
Sep 2007
Publication
The BMW Hydrogen 7 is the world’s first premium sedan with a bi-fuelled internal combustion engine concept that has undergone the series development process. This car also displays the BMW typical driving pleasure. During development the features of the hydrogen energy source were emphasized. Engine tank system and vehicle electronics were especially developed as integral parts of the vehicle for use with hydrogen. The safety-oriented development process established additional strict hydrogen-specific standards for the Hydrogen 7. The fulfilment of these standards were demonstrated in a comprehensive experimentation and testing program which included all required tests and a large number of additional hydrogen-specific crash tests such as side impacts to the tank coupling system or rear impacts. Furthermore the behaviour of the hydrogen tank was tested under extreme conditions for instance in flames and after strong degradation of the insulation. Testing included over 1.7 million km of driving; and all tests were passed successfully proving the intrinsic safety of the vehicle and also confirming the success of the safety-oriented development process which is to be continued during future vehicle development. A safety concept for future hydrogen vehicles poses new challenges for vehicles and infrastructure. One goal is to develop a car fuelled by hydrogen only while simultaneously optimizing the safety concept. Another important goal is removal of (self-imposed) restrictions for parking in enclosed spaces such as garages. We present a vision of safety standards requirements and a program for fulfilling them.
Real-gas Equations-of-State for the GASFLOW CFD Code
Sep 2011
Publication
GASFLOW is a finite-volume computer code that solves the time-dependent two-phase homogeneous equilibrium model compressible Navier–Stokes equations for multiple gas species with turbulence. The fluid-dynamics algorithm is coupled with conjugate heat and mass transfer models to represent walls floors ceilings and other internal structures to describe complex geometries such as those found in nuclear containments and facilities. Recent applications involve simulations of cryogenic hydrogen tanks at elevated pressures. These applications which often have thermodynamic conditions near the critical point require more accurate real-gas Equations-of-State (EoS) and transport properties than the standard ideal gas EoS and classical kinetic-theory transport properties. This paper describes the rigorous implementation of the generalized real-gas EoS into the GASFLOW CFD code as well as the specific implementation of respective real-gas models (Leachman's NIST hydrogen EoS a modified van der Waals EoS and a modified Nobel-Abel EoS); it also includes a logical testing procedure based upon a numerically exact benchmark problem. An example of GASFLOW simulations is presented for an ideal cryo-compressed hydrogen tank of the type utilized in fuel cell vehicles.
Evaluation of Optical and Spectroscopic Experiments of Hydrogen Jet Fires
Sep 2009
Publication
This paper reports results of evaluating joint experiments under the work programme of Hysafe occurring at HSL who provided the test facilities and basic measurements to generate jet fires whereas Fraunhofer ICT applied their equipment to visualise the jet fires by fast video techniques IR-cameras and fast scanning spectroscopy in the NIR/IR spectral region. Another paper describes the experimental set up and main findings of flame structures and propagation resolved in time. The spatial distribution of species and temperate as well as their time history and fluctuations give a basis of the evaluation of effects caused by such jet fires. Fraunhofer ICT applied their comprehensive evaluation codes to model the radiation emission from 3-atomic species in the flame especially H2O in the Infrared spectral range. The temperatures of the hydrogen flame were about 2000 K as found by least squares fit of the measured molecular bands by the codes. In comparison with video and thermo camera frames these might enable to estimate on a qualitative level species distribution and air entrainment and temperatures to identify hot and reactive zones. The risk analysis could use this information to estimate heat transfer and the areas of risk to direct inflammation from the jet fires by semi-empirical approaches.
Energy Storage as Part of a Secure Energy Supply
Mar 2017
Publication
Florian Ausfelder,
Christian Beilmann,
Martin Bertau,
Sigmar Bräuninger,
Angelika Heinzel,
Renate Hoer,
Wolfram Koch,
Falko Mahlendorf,
Anja Metzelthin,
Marcell Peuckert,
Ludolf Plass,
Konstantin Räuchle,
Martin Reuter,
Georg Schaub,
Sebastian Schiebahn,
Ekkehard Schwab,
Ferdi Schüth,
Detlef Stolten,
Gisa Teßmer,
Kurt Wagemann and
Karl-Friedrich Ziegahn
The current energy system is subject to a fundamental transformation: A system that is oriented towards a constant energy supply by means of fossil fuels is now expected to integrate increasing amounts of renewable energy to achieve overall a more sustainable energy supply. The challenges arising from this paradigm shift are currently most obvious in the area of electric power supply. However it affects all areas of the energy system albeit with different results. Within the energy system various independent grids fulfill the function of transporting and spatially distributing energy or energy carriers and the demand-oriented supply ensures that energy demands are met at all times. However renewable energy sources generally supply their energy independently from any specific energy demand. Their contribution to the overall energy system is expected to increase significantly.<br/>Energy storage technologies are one option for temporal matching of energy supply and demand. Energy storage systems have the ability to take up a certain amount of energy store it in a storage medium for a suitable period of time and release it in a controlled manner after a certain time delay. Energy storage systems can also be constructed as process chains by combining unit operations each of which cover different aspects of these functions. Large-scale mechanical storage of electric power is currently almost exclusively achieved by pumped-storage hydroelectric power stations.<br/>These systems may be supplemented in the future by compressed-air energy storage and possibly air separation plants. In the area of electrochemical storage various technologies are currently in various stages of research development and demonstration of their suitability for large-scale electrical energy storage. Thermal energy storage technologies are based on the storage of sensible heat exploitation of phase transitions adsorption/desorption processes and chemical reactions. The latter offer the possibility of permanent and loss-free storage of heat. The storage of energy in chemical bonds involves compounds that can act as energy carriers or as chemical feedstocks. Thus they are in direct economic competition with established (fossil fuel) supply routes. The key technology here – now and for the foreseeable future – is the electrolysis of water to produce hydrogen and oxygen.<br/>Hydrogen can be transformed by various processes into other energy carriers which can be exploited in different sectors of the energy system and/or as raw materials for energy-intensive industrial processes. Some functions of energy storage systems can be taken over by industrial processes. Within the overall energy system chemical energy storage technologies open up opportunities to link and interweave the various energy streams and sectors. Chemical energy storage not only offers means for greater integration of renewable energy outside the electric power sector it also creates new opportunities for increased flexibility novel synergies and additional optimization.<br/>Several examples of specific energy utilization are discussed and evaluated with respect to energy storage applications. The article describes various technologies for energy storage and their potential applications in the context of Germany’s Energiewende i.e. the transition towards a more sustainable energy system. Therefore the existing legal framework defines some of the discussions and findings within the article specifically the compensation for renewable electricity providers defined by the German Renewable Energy Sources Act which is under constant reformation. While the article is written from a German perspective the authors hope this article will be of general interest for anyone working in the areas of energy systems or energy technology.
Simulation of the Efficiency of Hydrogen Recombiners as Safety Devices
Sep 2011
Publication
Passive auto-catalytic recombiners (PARs) are used as safety devices in the containments of nuclear power plants (NPPs) for the removal of hydrogen that may be generated during specific reactor accident scenarios. In the presented study it was investigated whether a PAR designed for hydrogen removal inside a NPP containment would perform principally inside a typical surrounding of hydrogen or fuel cell applications. For this purpose a hydrogen release scenario inside a garage – based on experiments performed by CEA in the GARAGE facility (France) – has been simulated with and without PAR installation. For modelling the operational behaviour of the PAR the in-house code REKO-DIREKT was implemented in the CFD code ANSYS-CFX. The study was performed in three steps: First a helium release scenario was simulated and validated against experimental data. Second helium was replaced by hydrogen in the simulation. This step served as a reference case for the unmitigated scenario. Finally the numerical garage setup was enhanced with a commercial PAR model. The study shows that the PAR works efficiently by removing hydrogen and promoting mixing inside the garage. The hot exhaust plume promotes the formation of a thermal stratification that pushes the initial hydrogen rich gas downwards and in direction of the PAR inlet. The paper describes the code implementation and simulation results.
Analysis of Transient Hydrogen Release, Dispersion and Explosion in a Tunnel with Fuel Cell Vehicles using All-Speed CFD Code
Sep 2019
Publication
Hydrogen energy is expanding world wide in recent years while hydrogen safety issues have drawn considerable attention. It is widely accepted that accidental hydrogen release in an open air environment will disperse quickly hence not causing significant hydrogen hazards. A hydrogen hazard is more likely to occur when hydrogen is accidentally released in a confined place i.e. parking garages and tunnels. Prediction the consequences of hydrogen detonation is important for hydrogen safety assessment and for ensuring the safety of installations during accidents. Hence an accident scenario of hydrogen release nd detonation in a tunnel is analysed with GASFLOW-MPI in this paper. GASFLOW-MPI is a well validated parallel CFD code focusing on hydrogen transport combustion and detonation. GASFLOWMPI solves compressible Navier-Stokes equations with a powerful all-speed Arbitrary-Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE) method hence it can cover both the non-compressible flow during the hydrogen relesase and dispersion phases and the compressible flow during combustion and detonation. A 3D model of a tunnel including eight cars is modelled. Firstly the hydrogen dispersion in the tunnel is calculated. Then the detonation in the tunnel is calculated by manually igniting the hydrogen at the top of the tunnel when the λ criterion is maximum. The pressure loads are calculated to evaluate the consequence of the hazard.
Application of the Validated 3D Multiphase-multicomponent CFD Model to an Accidental Liquid Hydrogen Release Scenario in a Liquefication Plant
Sep 2017
Publication
Hydrogen-air mixtures are flammable in a wide range of compositions and have a low ignition energy compared to gaseous hydrocarbons. Due to its low density high buoyancy and diffusivity the mixing is strongly enhanced which supports distribution into large volumes if accidentally released. Economically valuable discontinuous transportation over large distances is only expected using liquid hydrogen (LH2). Releases of LH2 at its low temperature (20.3 K at 0.1 MPa) have additional hazards besides the combustible character of gaseous hydrogen (GH2). Hazard assessment requires simulation tools capable of calculating the pool spreading as well as the gas distribution for safety assessments of existing the future liquid hydrogen facilities. Evaluating possible risks the following process steps are useful:
- Possible accident release scenarios need to be identified for a given plant layout.
- Environmental boundary conditions such as wind conditions and humidity need to be identified and worst case scenarios have to be identified.
- A model approach based on this information which is capable of simulating LH2 releases vaporization rates and atmospheric dispersion of the gaseous hydrogen.
- Evaluate and verify safety distances identify new risks and/or extract certain design rules.
Trends in Gas Sensor Development for Hydrogen Safety
Sep 2013
Publication
Gas sensors are applied for facilitating the safe use of hydrogen in for example fuel cell and hydrogen fuelled vehicles. New sensor developments aimed at meeting the increasingly stringent performance requirements in emerging applications are presented based on in-house technical developments and a literature study. The strategy of combining different detection principles i.e. sensors based on electrochemical cells semiconductors or field effects in combination with thermal conductivity sensor or catalytic combustion elements in one new measuring system is reported. This extends the dynamic measuring range of the sensor while improving sensor reliability to achieve higher safety integrity through diverse redundancy. The application of new nanoscaled materials nano wires carbon tubes and graphene as well as the improvements in electronic components of field-effect resistive-type and optical systems are evaluated in view of key operating parameters such as sensor response time low energy consumption and low working temperature.
Interaction of Hydrogen Jets with Hot Surfaces
Sep 2017
Publication
The formation of hydrogen jets from pressurized sources and its ignition when hitting hot devices has been studied by many projects. The transient jets evolve with high turbulence depending on the configuration of the nozzle and especially the pressure in the hydrogen reservoir. In addition the length of the jets and the flames generated by ignition at a hot surface varies. Parameters to be varied were initial pressure of the source (2.5 10 20 and 40 MPa) distance between the nozzle and the hot surface (3 5 and 7 m) and temperature of the hot surface (between 400 and 1000 K). The interaction of the hydrogen jets is visualized by high-speed cinematography techniques which allow analysing the jet characteristics. By combination of various methods of image processing the visibility of the phenomena on the videos taken at 15 000 fps was improved. In addition high-speed NIR spectroscopy was used to obtain temperature profiles of the expanding deflagrations. The jets ignite already above 450 K for conditions mainly from the tubular source at 40 MPa. In addition the propagation of the flame front depends on all three varied parameters: temperature of the hot surface pressure in the reservoir and distance between nozzle and hot surface. In most cases also upstream propagation occurs. A high turbulence seems to lead to the strong deflagrations. At high temperatures of the ignition sources the interaction leads to fast deflagration and speeds up- and downstream of the jet. The deflagration velocity is close to velocity of sound and emission of pressure waves occurs.
Ignition and Heat Radiation of Cryogenic Hydrogen Jets
Sep 2011
Publication
In the present work release and ignition experiments with horizontal cryogenic hydrogen jets at temperatures of 35–65 K and pressures from 0.7 to 3.5 MPa were performed in the ICESAFE facility at KIT. This facility is specially designed for experiments under steady-state sonic release conditions with constant temperature and pressure in the hydrogen reservoir. In distribution experiments the temperature velocity turbulence and concentration distribution of hydrogen with different circular nozzle diameters and reservoir conditions was investigated for releases into stagnant ambient air. Subsequent combustion experiments of hydrogen jets included investigations on the stability of the flame and its propagation behaviour as function of the ignition position. Furthermore combustion pressures and heat radiation from the sonic jet flame during the combustion process were measured. Safety distances were evaluated and an extrapolation model to other jet conditions was proposed. The results of this work provide novel data on cryogenic sonic hydrogen jets and give information on the hazard potential arising from leaks in liquid hydrogen reservoirs.
Regulations and Research on RC&S for Hydrogen Storage Relevant To Transport and Vehicle Issues with Special Focus on Composite Containments
Sep 2011
Publication
Developers interested in high pressure storage of hydrogen for mobile use increasingly rely on composite cylinders for onboard storage or transport of dangerous goods. Thus composite materials and systems deserve special consideration. History gives interesting background information important to the understanding of the current situation as to regulations codes and standards.<br/>Based on this review origins of different regulations for the storage of hydrogen as dangerous good and as propellant for vehicles will be examined. Both categories started out using steel and sometimes aluminium as cylinder material. With composite materials becoming more common a new problem emerged: vital input for regulations on composite pressure systems was initially derived from decades of experience with steel cylinders. As a result both regulatory fields suffer somewhat from this common basis. Only recent developments regarding requirements for composite cylinders have begun to go more and more separate ways. Thus these differences lead to some shortcomings in regulation with respect to composite storage systems.<br/>In principle in spite of separate development these deficits are in both applications very much the same: there are uncertainties in the prediction of safe service life in retesting procedures of composite cylinders and in their intervals. Hence different aspects of uncertainties and relevant approaches to solutions will be explained.
Hydrogen Detection- Visualisation of Hydrogen Using Non Invasive Optical Schlieren Technique BOS
Sep 2005
Publication
The detection of hydrogen after its accidental release is not only important for research purposes but will be much more important under safety aspects for future applications when hydrogen should be a standard energy resource. At Fraunhofer ICT two principally different approaches were made: first the new optical background-oriented schlieren method (BOS) is used for the visualization of hydrogen distribution and mixing processes at a rate of up to 1000 frames per second. The results from experiments with small scale injection of hydrogen/air–mixtures into air flows and free jets of hydrogen and hydrogen/air–mixtures emerging from 1” hoses simulating exhaust pipes will be discussed and interpreted with support from selected high speed videos. Finally mixing zones and safety distances can be determined by this powerful method.
Optimal Development of Alternative Fuel Station Networks Considering Node Capacity Restrictions
Jan 2020
Publication
A potential solution to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the transport sector is the use of alternative fuel vehicles (AFV). As global GHG emission standards have been in place for passenger cars for several years infrastructure modelling for new AFV is an established topic. However as the regulatory focus shifts towards heavy-duty vehicles (HDV) the market diffusion of AFV-HDV will increase as will planning the relevant AFV infrastructure for HDV. Existing modelling approaches need to be adapted because the energy demand per individual refill increases significantly for HDV and there are regulatory as well as technical limitations for alternative fuel station (AFS) capacities at the same time. While the current research takes capacity restrictions for single stations into account capacity limits for locations (i.e. nodes) – the places where refuelling stations are built such as highway entries exits or intersections – are not yet considered. We extend existing models in this respect and introduce an optimal development for AFS considering (station) location capacity restrictions. The proposed method is applied to a case study of a potential fuel cell heavy-duty vehicle AFS network. We find that the location capacity limit has a major impact on the number of stations required station utilization and station portfolio variety.
Design of Catalytic Recombiners for Safe Removal of Hydrogen from Flammable Gas Mixtures
Sep 2007
Publication
Several today’s and future applications in energy technology bear the risk of the formation of flammable hydrogen/air mixtures either due to the direct use of hydrogen or due to hydrogen appearing as a by-product. If there’s the possibility of hydrogen being released accidentally into closed areas countermeasures have to be implemented in order to mitigate the threat of an explosion. In the field of nuclear safety passive auto-catalytic recombiners (PAR) are well-known devices for reducing the risk of a hydrogen detonation in a nuclear power plant in the course of a severe accident. Hydrogen and oxygen react on catalyst materials like platinum or palladium already far below conventional flammability limits. The most important concern with regard to the utilization of hydrogen recombiners is the adequate removal of the reaction heat. Already low hydrogen concentrations may increase the system temperature beyond the self-ignition limit of hydrogen/air mixtures and may lead to an unintended ignition on hot parts of the PAR.<br/>Starting from the nuclear application since several years IEF-6 and LRST perform joint research in the field of passive auto-catalytic recombiners including experimental studies modelling and development of new design concepts. Recently approaches on specifically designed catalysts and on passive cooling devices have been successfully tested. In a design study both approaches are combined in order to provide means for efficient and safe removal of hydrogen. The paper summarizes results achieved so far and possible designs for future applications.
Effects of Oxidants on Hydrogen Spontaneous Ignition: Experiments and Modelling
Sep 2017
Publication
Experiments were performed on the influence of oxidants (air pure oxygen O2 and pure nitrous oxide N2O at atmospheric pressure) in the straight expansion tube after the burst disk on the hydrogen spontaneous ignition. The lowest pressure at which the spontaneous ignition is observed has been researched for a 4 mm diameter tube with a length of 10 cm for the two oxidant gases. The ignition phenomenon is observed with a high speed camera and the external overpressures are measured. Numerical simulations have also been conducted with the high resolution CFD approach detailed chemistry formerly developed by Wen and co-workers. Comparison is made between the predictions and the experimental data.
Experimental Study of Ignited Unsteady Hydrogen Releases from a High Pressure Reservoir
Sep 2011
Publication
In order to simulate an accidental hydrogen release from the high pressure pipe system of a hydrogen facility a systematic study on the nature of transient hydrogen jets into air and their combustion behavior was performed at the KIT hydrogen test site HYKA. Horizontal unsteady hydrogen jets from a reservoir of 0.37 dm3 with initial pressures of up to 200 bar have been investigated. The hydrogen jets released via round nozzles 3 4 and 10 mm were ignited with different ignition times and positions. The experiments provide new experimental data on pressure loads and heat releases resulting from the deflagration of hydrogen–air clouds formed by unsteady turbulent hydrogen jets released into a free environment. It is shown that the maximum pressure loads occur for ignition in a narrow position and time window. The possible hazard potential arising from an ignited free transient hydrogen jet is described.
Validation of Cryo-Compressed Hydrogen Storage (CCH2) – A Probabilistic Approach
Sep 2011
Publication
Due to its promising potential to overcome the challenge of thermal endurance of liquid hydrogen storage systems cryo-compressed hydrogen storage (CcH2) is regarded as a verypromising physical storage solution in particular for use in larger passenger vehicles with high energy and long range requirements. A probabilistic approach for validation of safe operation of CcH2 storage systems under automotive requirements and experimental results on life-cycle testing is presented. The operational regime of BMW's CcH2 storage covers pressures of up to 35 MPa and temperatures from +65 C down to -240 C applying high loads on composite and metallic materials of the cryogenic pressure vesselcompared to ambient carbon fiber reinforced pressure vessels. Thus the proof of fatigue strength under combined pressure and deep temperature cyclic loads remains a challenging exercise. Furthermore it will be shown that the typical automotive safety and life-cycle requirements can be fulfilled by the CcH2 vehicle storage system and moreover that the CcH2 storage system can even feature safety advantages over a CGH2 storage system mainly due to the advantageous thermodynamic properties of cryogenic hydrogen the lower storage pressure and due to the intrinsic protection against intrusion through the double-shell design.
Flame Propagation Near the Limiting Conditions in a Thin Layer Geometry
Sep 2019
Publication
A series of experiments on hydrogen flame propagation in a thin layer geometry is presented. Premixed hydrogen-air compositions in the range from 6 to 15%(vol.) H2 are tested. Semi-open vertical combustion chamber consists of two transparent Plexiglas side walls with main dimensions of 90x20 cm with a gap from 1 to 10 mm in between. Test mixtures are ignited at the open end of the chamber so that the flame propagates towards the closed end. Ignition position changes from top to bottom in order to take into account an effect of gravity on flame propagation regimes. High-speed shadow imaging is used to visualize and record the combustion process. Thermal-diffusion and Darrieus-Landau instabilities are governing the general flame behaviour. Heat losses to side walls and viscous friction in a thin layer may fully suppress the flame propagation with local or global extinction. The sensitivity to heat losses can be characterized using a Peclet number as a ratio of layer thickness to laminar flame thickness. Approaching to critical Peclet number Pec = 42 the planar or wrinkled flame surface degradants to one-or two-heads "finger" flame propagating straight (for two-heads flame) or chaotic (for one-head "finger" flame). Such a "fingering" of the flame is found for the first time for gaseous systems and very similar to that reported for smouldering or filtering combustion of solid materials and also under micro-gravity conditions. The distance between "fingers" may depend on deficit of limiting component. The processes investigated can be very important from academic and practical points of view with respect to safety of hydrogen fuel cells.
No more items...