Safety
Investigation of Hydrogen Leaks from Double Ferrule Fittings
Sep 2021
Publication
The use of hydrogen is expected to increase rapidly in the future. Leakage of hydrogen pipework are the main forms of safety problems in hydrogen utilization. In this paper a numerical model of hydrogen leakage and diffusion in pipe joints was established. The Schlieren + high-speed camera is used in experiments to observe the leakage of hydrogen in the pipe joints. In addition the shape and size of the scratches in the tube were statistically analyzed. Finally the leakage characteristics of double ferrule joints with scratches are experimentally analyzed. For the two scratch sizes the critical pressure values for the vortex transition are 0.2 MPa and 0.03 MPa. Through our experimental process some practical experience and suggestions are given.
Evidence Base Utilised to Justify a Hydrogen Blend Gas Network Safety Case
Sep 2021
Publication
Blending hydrogen with natural gas up to 20 % mol/mol has been identified as a key enabler of hydrogen deployment within the UK gas network. This work outlines the evidence base generated to form the basis of safety submitted to the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) to justify a demonstration of hydrogen blending on a live public gas network within the UK supplying a hydrogen blend to 668homes over the course of 10 months. An evidence base to demonstrate that gas users are not prejudiced by the addition of hydrogen is required by the Gas Safety (Management) Regulations [1] to allow hydrogen distribution above the 0.1 mol% limit specified within the regulations. The technical evidence generated to support the safety case presented to the HSE concerned the implications of introducing a hydrogen blend on appliance operation materials gas characteristics and operational procedures. The outputs of the technical evidence workstreams provided input data to a Quantitative Risk Assessment (QRA) of the GB gas distribution network. The QRA was developed in support of the safety case to allow a causal understanding of public risk to be understood where harm due to gas usage was defined as risk to life caused either by carbon monoxide poisoning or as a result of fires/explosions. Public records were used to calibrate and validate the base risk model to understand the dynamics of public risk due to natural gas usage. The experimental and analytical results of the technical workstreams were then used to derive risk model inputs relating to a hydrogen blend. This allowed a quantified comparison of risk to be understood to demonstrate parity of safety between natural gas and a hydrogen blend. This demonstration of risk parity is a condition precedent of allowing the distribution and utilisation of hydrogen blends within the GB gas network.
Research Efforts for the Resolution of Hydrogen Risk
Jan 2015
Publication
During the past 10 years the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) has performed a study to control hydrogen gas in the containment of the nuclear power plants. Before the Fukushima accident analytical activities for gas distribution analysis in experiments and plants were primarily conducted using a multidimensional code: the GASFLOW. After the Fukushima accident the COM3D code which can simulate a multi-dimensional hydrogen explosion was introduced in 2013 to complete the multidimensional hydrogen analysis system. The code validation efforts of the multidimensional codes of the GASFLOW and the COM3D have continued to increase confidence in the use of codes using several international experimental data. The OpenFOAM has been preliminarily evaluated for APR1400 containment based on experience from coded validation and the analysis of hydrogen distribution and explosion using the multidimensional codes the GASFLOW and the COM3D. Hydrogen safety in nuclear power has become a much more important issue after the Fukushima event in which hydrogen explosions occurred. The KAERI is preparing a large-scale test that can be used to validate the performance of domestic passive autocatalytic recombiners (PARs) and can provide data for the validation of the severe accident code being developed in Korea
Gas Turbine Enclosures: Determining Ventilation Safety Criteria using Hydrogen Explosion Modelling
Sep 2021
Publication
Dilution ventilation is the current basis of safety following a flammable gas leak within a gas turbine enclosure and compliance requirements are defined for methane fuels in ISO 21789. These requirements currently define a safety criteria of a maximum flammable gas cloud size within an enclosure. The requirements are based on methane explosion tests conducted during a HSE Joint Industry Project which identified typical pressures associated with a range of gas cloud sizes. The industry standard approach is to assess the ventilation performance of specific enclosure designs against these requirements using CFD modelling. Gas turbine manufacturers are increasingly considering introducing hydrogen/methane fuel mixtures and looking towards operating with hydrogen alone. It is therefore important to review the applicability of current safety standards for these new fuels as the pressure resulting from a hydrogen explosion is expected to be significantly higher than that from a methane explosion. In this paper we replicate the previous methane explosion tests for hydrogen and hydrogen/methane fuel mixtures using the explosion modelling tool FLACS CFD. The results are used to propose updated limiting safety criteria for hydrogen fuels to support ventilation CFD analysis for specific enclosure designs. It is found that significantly smaller gas cloud sizes are likely to be acceptable for gas turbines fueled by hydrogen however significantly more hydrogen than methane is required per unit volume to generate a stoichiometric cloud (as hydrogen has a lower stoichiometric air fuel ratio than methane). This effect results in the total quantity of gas in the enclosure (and as such detectability of the gas) being broadly similar when operating gas turbines on hydrogen when compared to methane.
Numerical Simulations of Suppression Effect of Water Mist on Hydrogen Deflagration in Confined Spaces
Sep 2021
Publication
Hydrogen safety issues attract focuses increasingly as more and more hydrogen powered vehicles are going to be operated in traffic infrastructures of different kinds like tunnels. Due to the confinement feature of traffic tunnels hydrogen deflagration may pose a risk when a hydrogen leak event occurs in a tunnel e.g. failure of the hydrogen storage system caused by a car accident in a tunnel. A water injection system can be designed in tunnels as a mitigation measure to suppress the pressure and thermal loads of hydrogen combustion in accident scenarios. The COM3D is a fully verified three-dimensional finite-difference turbulent flow combustion code which models gas mixing hydrogen combustion and detonation in nuclear containment with mitigation device or other confined facilities like vacuum vessel of fusion and semi-confined hydrogen facilities in industry such as traffic tunnels hydrogen refueling station etc. Therefore by supporting of the European HyTunnel-CS project the COM3D is applied to simulate numerically the hydrogen deflagration accident in a tunnel model being suppressed by water mist injection. The suppression effect of water mist and the suppression mechanism is elaborated and discussed in the study.
Investigation on Cooling Effect of Water Sprays on Tunnel Fires of Hydrogen
Sep 2021
Publication
As one of the most promising renewable green energies hydrogen power is a popularly accepted option to drive automobiles. Commercial application of fuel cell vehicles has been started since 2015. More and more hydrogen safety concerns have been considered for years. Tunnels are an important part of traffic infrastructure with a mostly confined feature. Hydrogen leak followed possibly by a hydrogen fire is a potential accident scenario which can be triggered trivially by a car accident while hydrogen powered vehicles operate in a tunnel. Water spray is recommended traditionally as a mitigation measure against tunnel fires. The interaction between water spray and hydrogen fire is studied in a way of numerical simulations. By using the computer program of Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) tunnel fires of released hydrogen in different scales are simulated coupled with water droplet injections featured in different droplet sizes or varying mass flow rates. The cooling effect of spray on hot gases of hydrogen fires is apparently observed in the simulations. However in some circumstance the turbulence intensified by the water injection can prompt hydrogen combustion which is a negative side-effect of the spray.
Development of Risk Mitigation Guidance for Sensor Placement Inside Mechanically Ventilated Enclosures – Phase 1
Sep 2019
Publication
Guidance on Sensor Placement was identified as the top research priority for hydrogen sensors at the 2018 HySafe Research Priority Workshop on hydrogen safety in the category Mitigation Sensors Hazard Prevention and Risk Reduction. This paper discusses the initial steps (Phase 1) to develop such guidance for mechanically ventilated enclosures. This work was initiated as an international collaborative effort to respond to emerging market needs related to the design and deployment equipment for hydrogen infrastructure that is often installed in individual equipment cabinets or ventilated enclosures. The ultimate objective of this effort is to develop guidance for an optimal sensor placement such that when integrated into a facility design and operation will allow earlier detection at lower levels of incipient leaks leading to significant hazard reduction. Reliable and consistent early warning of hydrogen leaks will allow for the risk mitigation by reducing or even eliminating the probability of escalation of small leaks into large and uncontrolled events. To address this issue a study of a real-world mechanically ventilated enclosure containing GH2 equipment was conducted where CFD modelling of the hydrogen dispersion (performed by AVT and UQTR and independently by the JRC) was validated by the NREL Sensor laboratory using a Hydrogen Wide Area Monitor (HyWAM) consisting of a 10-point gas and temperature measurement analyzer. In the release test helium was used as a hydrogen surrogate. Expansion of indoor releases to other larger facilities (including parking structures vehicle maintenance facilities and potentially tunnels) and incorporation into QRA tools such as HyRAM is planned for Phase 2. It is anticipated that results of this work will be used to inform national and international standards such as NFPA 2 Hydrogen Technologies Code Canadian Hydrogen Installation Code (CHIC) and relevant ISO/TC 197 and CEN documents.
Towards the Efficient and Time-accurate Simulations of Early Stages of Industrial Explosions
Sep 2021
Publication
Combustion during a nuclear reactor accident can result in pressure loads that are potentially fatal for the structural integrity of the reactor containment or its safety equipment. Enabling efficient modelling of such safety-critical scenarios is the goal of ongoing work. In this paper attention is given to capturing early phases of flame propagation. Transient simulations that are not prohibitively expensive for use at industrial scale are required given that a typical flame propagation study takes a large number of simulation time steps to complete. An improved numerical method used in this work is based on explicit time integration by means of Strong Stability Preserving (SSP) Runge-Kutta schemes. These allow an increased time step size for a given level of accuracy—reducing the overall computational effort. Furthermore a wide range of flow conditions is encountered in analysis of accelerating flames: from incompressible to potentially supersonic. In contrast numerical schemes for spatial discretization would often prove lacking in either stability or accuracy outside the intended flow regime—with density-based schemes being traditionally designed and applied to compressible (Ma>0.3) flows. In the present work a formulation of an all-speed density-based numerical flux scheme is used for simulation of slow flames starting from ignition. Validation was carried out using experiments with spherical lean hydrogen flames at laboratory scale. Turbulence conditions in the experiments correspond to those that can arise in a nuclear reactor containment during an accident. Results show that the new numerical method has the potential to predict flame speed and pressure rise at a reduced computational effort.
Effect of Flow Speed on Ignition Characteristics of Hydrogen/air Mixtures
Sep 2021
Publication
A fuel cell vehicle has a purging system for exhausting contaminated hydrogen gas. Notwithstanding the allowable hydrogen emissions levels in the purging system are regulated by the GTR a further research on the safety requirement of emissions concentrations is therefore needed for the vehicle design into a more rational system. In the present study the effects of flow speed concentration humidity on ignition characteristics of hydrogen/air mixtures were experimentally investigated. The results demonstrate that the value of Lower Flammable Limit increased with an increase in the velocity of hydrogen/air mixtures and slightly increased with a decrease in oxygen concentration.
Quantitive Risk Assessment of the Model Representing Latest Japanese Hydrogen Refuelling Stations
Sep 2021
Publication
Current safety codes and technical standards related to Japanese hydrogen refueling stations (HRSs) have been established based on qualitative risk assessment and quantitative effectiveness validation of safety measures for more than ten years. In the last decade there has been significant development in the technologies and significant increment in operational experience related to HRSs. We performed a quantitative risk assessment (QRA) of the HRS model representing Japanese HRSs with the latest information in the previous study. The QRA results were obtained by summing risk contours derived from each process unit. They showed that the risk contours of 10-3 and 10-4 per year were confined within the HRS boundaries whereas those of 10-5 and 10-6 per year are still present outside the HRS boundaries. Therefore we analyzed the summation of risk contours derived from each unit and identified the largest risk scenarios outside the station. The HRS model in the previous study did not consider fire and blast protection walls which could reduce the risks outside the station. Therefore we conducted a detailed risk analysis of the identified scenarios using 3D structure modeling. The heat radiation and temperature rise of jet fire scenarios that pose the greatest risk to the physical surroundings in the HRS model were estimated in detail based on computational fluid dynamics with 3D structures including fire protection walls. Results show that the risks spreading outside the north- west- and east-side station boundaries are expected to be acceptable by incorporating the fire protection wall into the Japanese HRS model.
An Experimental Study of Propagating Spherical Flames in Unconfined Hydrogen-oxygen Explosions
Sep 2021
Publication
The study to understand the flame propagation behaviors of hydrogen-oxygen explosions is required to make a precise risk assessment. Moreover although research has investigated the propagating spherical flames in unconfined hydrogen-air explosions no study to date has examined the hydrogen-oxygen explosions. The spherical flame propagation in unconfined hydrogen-oxygen explosions have been investigated using a soap bubble method. In the present experiments hydrogen-oxygen mixtures were filled in a 10 cm diameter soap bubble and ignited by an electric spark at the center. The flame propagation behaviors were measured by a high-speed Schlieren photography. The laminar burning velocities and critical flame radii for the onset of flame acceleration in unconfined hydrogen-oxygen explosions were estimated. Results demonstrated that the laminar burning velocities of hydrogenoxygen mixtures were much faster than those of hydrogen-air mixtures. In addition the shift value of maximum laminar burning velocity for hydrogen-oxygen mixtures towards a leaner equivalence ratio is observed. The experimental flame speeds for all experiments were increased owing to diffusionalthermal and Darrieus-Landau instabilities although the measured flame radii were small. The critical flame radius corresponding to the onset of flame acceleration decreased with the decrease in equivalence ratio.
Numerical Study of Hydrogen Addition Effects on Aluminum Particle Combustion
Sep 2021
Publication
In this study the combustion of submicron-sized Al particles in air was studied numerically with a particular focus on the effect of hydrogen addition. Oxidation of the Al particles and the interaction with hydrogen-related intermediates were considered by regarding them as liquid-phase molecules initially. Zero- and One-dimensional numerical simulations were then carried out to investigate the effect of the hydrogen addition on fundamental combustion characteristics of the Al flame by calculating properties such as ignition delay time and flame speed. Our attention was paid to how the hydrogen chemistry is coupled with the Al oxidation process. Numerical results show that the hydrogen addition generally reduces the reactivity of Al such that the flame speed and temperature decrease while it can greatly shorten ignition delay times of the Al flame depending on initial temperatures.
Safety Planning and Management in EU Hydrogen and Fuel Cells Projects - Guidance Document
Sep 2021
Publication
The document provides information on safety planning implementation and reporting for projects involving hydrogen and/or fuel cell technologies. It does not intend to replace or contradict existing regulations which prevail under all circumstances. Neither is it meant to conflict with relevant international or national standards or to replace existing company safety policies codes and procedures. Instead this guidance document aims to assist projects and project partners in identifying hazards and associated risks in prevention and/or mitigation of them through a proper safety plan in implementing the safety plan and reporting safety related events. This shall help in safely delivering the project and ultimately producing inherently safer systems processes and infrastructure.
The Effect of Hydrogen Containing Fuel Blends Upon Flashback in Swirl Burners
Feb 2011
Publication
Lean premixed swirl combustion is widely used in gas turbines and many other combustion Processes due to the benefits of good flame stability and blow off limits coupled with low NOx emissions. Although flashback is not generally a problem with natural gas combustion there are some reports of flashback damage with existing gas turbines whilst hydrogen enriched fuel blends especially those derived from gasification of coal and/or biomass/industrial processes such as steel making cause concerns in this area. Thus this paper describes a practical experimental approach to study and reduce the effect of flashback in a compact design of generic swirl burner representative of many systems. A range of different fuel blends are investigated for flashback and blow off limits; these fuel mixes include methane methane/hydrogen blends pure hydrogen and coke oven gas. Swirl number effects are investigated by varying the number of inlets or the configuration of the inlets. The well known Lewis and von Elbe critical boundary velocity gradient expression is used to characterise flashback and enable comparison to be made with other available data. Two flashback phenomena are encountered here. The first one at lower swirl numbers involves flashback through the outer wall boundary layer where the crucial parameter is the critical boundary velocity gradient Gf. Values of Gf are of similar magnitude to those reported by Lewis and von Elbe for laminar flow conditions and it is recognised that under the turbulent flow conditions pertaining here actual gradients in the thin swirl flow boundary layer are much higher than occur under laminar flow conditions. At higher swirl numbers the central recirculation zone (CRZ) becomes enlarged and extends backwards over the fuel injector to the burner baseplate and causes flashback to occur earlier at higher velocities. This extension of the CRZ is complex being governed by swirl number equivalence ratio and Reynolds Number. Under these conditions flashback occurs when the cylindrical flame front surrounding the CRZ rapidly accelerates outwards to the tangential inlets and beyond especially with hydrogen containing fuel mixes. Conversely at lower swirl numbers with a modified exhaust geometry hence restricted CRZ flashback occurs through the outer thin boundary layer at much lower flow rates when the hydrogen content of the fuel mix does not exceed 30%. The work demonstrates that it is possible to run premixed swirl burners with a wide range of hydrogen fuel blends so as to substantially minimise flashback behaviour thus permitting wider used of the technology to reduce NOx emissions.
Numerical Evaluation of Terrain Landscape Influence on Hydrogen Explosion Consequences
Sep 2021
Publication
The aim of this study is to assess numerically the influence of terrain landscape on the distribution of probable harmful consequences to personnel of hydrogen fueling station caused by an accidentally released and exploded hydrogen. In order to extract damaging factors of the hydrogen explosion wave (maximum overpressure and impulse of pressure phase) a three-dimensional mathematical model of gas mixture dynamics with chemical interaction is used. It allows controlling current pressure in every local point of actual space taking into account complex terrain. This information is used locally in every computational cell to evaluate the conditional probability of such consequences on human beings as ear-drum rupture and lethal ones on the basis of probit analysis. In order to use this technique automatically during the computational process the tabular dependence ""probit-functionimpact probability"" is replaced by a piecewise cubic spline. To evaluate the influence of the landscape profile on the non-stationary three-dimensional overpressure distribution above the earth surface near an epicenter of accidental hydrogen explosion a series of computational experiments with different variants of the terrain is carried out. Each variant differs in the level of mutual arrangement of the explosion epicenter and the places of possible location of personnel. Two control points with different distances from the explosion epicenter are considered. Diagrams of lethal and ear-drum rupture conditional probabilities are build to compare different variants of landscape profile. It is found that the increase or decrease in the level of the location of the control points relative to the level of the epicenter of the explosion significantly changes the scale of the consequences in the actual zone around the working places and should be taken into account by the risk managing experts at the stage of deciding on the level of safety at hydrogen fueling stations.
Building Hydrogen Competence, a Technology Aligned Skills and Knowledge Approach
Sep 2021
Publication
There is a pressing need for a framework and strategic approach to be taken to workforce safety training requirements of new hydrogen projects. It is apparent that organisations embarking on projects utilizing or producing green hydrogen need to implement a program of training for their workforce in order to ensure that all personnel within their organisation understand not only the environmental benefits of green hydrogen but also the safety considerations that come with either producing or using hydrogen as a fuel. Energy Transition must be safe to be successful. If such an approach is taken by industry and stakeholders it is also possible to use the high level content as a vehicle and basis to offer public audiences which also require a basic level of understanding in order to fully accept the transition to using hydrogen more widely as a fuel. This will be crucial to the success of national hydrogen strategies. Coeus Energy has developed an innovative framework of training following engagement with operators keen to ensure their duty of care responsibilities have been met. Whilst having highly skilled personnel already employed within their organisations specific hydrogen content is still required for workforce competence. This is where the framework need arises as the knowledge is required at all levels of an organisation.
Evaluation of Selectivity and Resistance to Poisons of Commercial Hydrogen Sensors
Sep 2013
Publication
The development of reliable hydrogen sensors is crucial for the safe use of hydrogen. One of the main concerns of end-users is sensor reliability in the presence of species other than the target gas which can lead to false alarms or undetected harmful situations. In order to assess the selectivity of commercial of the shelf (COTS) hydrogen sensors a number of sensors of different technology types were exposed to various interferent gas species. Cross-sensitivity tests were performed in accordance to the recommendations of ISO 26142:2010 using the hydrogen sensor testing facilities of NREL and JRC-IET. The results and conclusions arising from this study are presented.
Explosive Phase Transition in LH2
Sep 2021
Publication
This paper describes two models for analysing and simulating the physical effects of explosive phase transition of liquid hydrogen (LH2) also known as cold BLEVE. The present work is based on theoretical and experimental work for liquefied CO2. A Rankine Hugoniot analysis for evaporation waves that was previously developed for CO2 is now extended to LH2. A CFD-method for simulating two-phase flow with mass transfer between the phases is presented and compared with the Rankine Hugoniot analysis results. The Rankine Hugoniot method uses real fluid equations of state suited for LH2 while the CFD method uses linear equations of state suited for shock capturing methods. The results show that there will be a blast from a catastrophic rupture of an LH2 vessel and that the blast waves will experience a slow decay due to the large positive pressure phase.
Hydrogen Component Leak Rate Quantification for System Risk and Reliability Assessment through QRA and PHM Frameworks
Sep 2021
Publication
The National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) Hydrogen Safety Research and Development (HSR&D) program in collaboration with the University of Maryland’s Systems Risk and Reliability Analysis Laboratory (SyRRA) are working to improve reliability and reduce risk in hydrogen systems. This approach strives to use quantitative data on component leaks and failures together with Prognosis and Health Management (PHM) and Quantitative Risk Assessment (QRA) to identify atrisk components reduce component failures and downtime and predict when components require maintenance. Hydrogen component failures increase facility maintenance cost facility downtime and reduce public acceptance of hydrogen technologies ultimately increasing facility size and cost because of conservative design requirements. Leaks are a predominant failure mode for hydrogen components. However uncertainties in the amount of hydrogen emitted from leaking components and the frequency of those failure events limit the understanding of the risks that they present under real-world operational conditions. NREL has deployed a test fixture the Leak Rate Quantification Apparatus (LRQA) to quantify the mass flow rate of leaking gases from medium and high-pressure components that have failed while in service. Quantitative hydrogen leak rate data from this system could ultimately be used to better inform risk assessment and Regulation Codes and Standards (RCS). Parallel activity explores the use of PHM and QRA techniques to assess and reduce risk thereby improving safety and reliability of hydrogen systems. The results of QRAs could further provide a systematic and science-based foundation for the design and implementation of RCS as in the latest versions of the NFPA 2 code for gaseous hydrogen stations. Alternatively data-driven techniques of PHM could provide new damage diagnosis and health-state prognosis tools. This research will help end users station owners and operators and regulatory bodies move towards risk-informed preventative maintenance versus emergency corrective maintenance reducing cost and improving reliability. Predictive modelling of failures could improve safety and affect RCS requirements such as setback distances at liquid hydrogen fueling sites. The combination of leak rate quantification research PHM and QRA can lead to better informed models enabling data-based decision to be made for hydrogen system safety improvements.
Measurement and Modeling on Hydrogen Jet and Combustion from a Pressurize Vessel
Sep 2021
Publication
Hydrogen safety is an important topic for hydrogen energy application. Unintended hydrogen releases and combustions are potential accident scenarios which are of great interest for developing and updating the safety codes and standards. In this paper hydrogen releases and delayed ignitions were studied.
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