Safety
Performance Evaluation of Empirical Models for Vented Lean Hydrogen Explosions
Sep 2017
Publication
Explosion venting is a method commonly used to prevent or minimize damage to an enclosure caused by an accidental explosion. An estimate of the maximum overpressure generated though explosion is an important parameter in the design of the vents. Various engineering models (Bauwens et al. 2012 Molkov and Bragin 2015) and European (EN 14994 ) and USA standards (NFPA 68) are available to predict such overpressure. In this study their performance is evaluated using a number of published experiments. Comparison of pressure predictions from various models have also been carried out for the recent experiments conducted by GexCon using a 20 feet ISO container. The results show that the model of Bauwens et al. (2012) predicts well for hydrogen concentration between 16% and 21% and in the presence of obstacles. The model of Molkov et al. (2015) is found to work well for hydrogen concentrations between 10% and 30% without obstacles. In the presence of obstacles as no guidelines are given to set the coefficient for obstacles in the model it was necessary to tune the coefficient to match the experimental data. The predictions of the formulas in NFPA 68 show a large scatter across different tests. The current version of both EN 14994 and NFPA 68 are found to have very limited range of applicability and can hardly be used for vent sizing of hydrogen-air deflagrations. Overall the accuracy of all the engineering models was found to be limited. Some recommendations concerning their applicability will be given for vented lean-hydrogen explosion concentrations of interest to practical applications.
Dispersion of Cryogenic Hydrogen Through High-aspect Ratio Nozzles
Sep 2019
Publication
Liquid hydrogen is increasingly being used as a delivery and storage medium for stations that provide compressed gaseous hydrogen for fuel cell electric vehicles. In efforts to provide scientific justification for separation distances for liquid hydrogen infrastructure in fire codes the dispersion characteristics of cryogenic hydrogen jets (50–64 K) from high aspect ratio nozzles have been measured at 3 and 5 barabs stagnation pressures. These nozzles are more characteristic of unintended leaks which would be expected to be cracks rather than conventional round nozzles. Spontaneous Raman scattering was used to measure the concentration and temperature field along the major and minor axes. Within the field of interrogation the axis-switching phenomena was not observed but rather a self-similar Gaussian-profile flow regime similar to room temperature or cryogenic hydrogen releases through round nozzles. The concentration decay rate and half-widths for the planar cryogenic jets were found to be nominally equivalent to that of round nozzle cryogenic hydrogen jets indicating a similar flammable envelope. The results from these experiments will be used to validate models for cryogenic hydrogen dispersion that will be used for simulations of alternative scenarios and quantitative risk assessment
On The Kinetics of Alh3 Decomposition and the Subsequent Al Oxidation
Sep 2011
Publication
Metal hydrides are used for hydrogen storage. AlH3 shows a capacity to store about 10 wt% hydrogen. Its hydrogen is split-off in the temperature interval of 400–500 K. On dehydrogenation a nano-structured Al material emerges with specific surfaces up to 15–20 m2/g. The surface areas depend on the heating rate because of a temperature dependent crystallite growth. The resulting Al oxidizes up to 20–25% weight on air access forming an alumina passivation layer of 3–4 nm thickness on all exposed surfaces. The heat released from this Al oxidation induces a high risk to this type of hydrogen storage if the containment might be destroyed accidentally. The kinetics of the dehydrogenation and the subsequent oxidation is investigated by methods of thermal analysis. A reaction scheme is confirmed which consists of a starting Avrami-Erofeev mechanism followed by formal 1st order oxidation on unlimited air access. The kinetic parameters activation energies and pre-exponentials are evaluated and can be used to calculate the reaction progress. Together with the heat of the Al oxidation the overall heat release and the related rate can be estimated.
Real World Hydrogen Technology Validation
Sep 2011
Publication
The Department of Energy the Department of Defense's Defense Logistics Agency and the Department of Transportation's Federal Transit Administration have funded learning demonstrations and early market deployments to provide insight into applications of hydrogen technologies on the road in the warehouse and as stationary power. NREL's analyses validate the technology in real-world applications reveal the status of the technology and facilitate the development of hydrogen and fuel cell technologies manufacturing and operations. This paper presents the maintenance safety and operation data of fuel cells in multiple applications with the reported incidents near misses and frequencies. NREL has analyzed records of more than 225000 kilograms of hydrogen that have been dispensed through more than 108000 hydrogen fills with an excellent safety record.
A New Approach to Vented Deflagration Modeling
Sep 2017
Publication
In the present work CFD simulations of a hydrogen deflagration experiment are performed. The experiment carried out by KIT was conducted in a 1 m3 enclosure with a square vent of 0.5 m2 located in the center of one of its walls. The enclosure was filled with homogeneous hydrogen-air mixture of 18% v/v before ignition at its back-wall. As the flame propagates away from the ignition point unburned mixture is forced out through the vent. This mixture is ignited when the flame passes through the vent initiating a violent external explosion which leads to a rapid increase in pressure. The work focuses on the modeling of the external explosion phenomenon. A new approach is proposed in order to predict with accuracy the strength of external explosions using Large Eddy Simulation. The new approach introduces new relations to account for the interaction between the turbulence and the flame front. CFD predictions of the pressure inside and outside the enclosure and of the flame front shape are compared against experimental measurements. The comparison indicates a much better performance of the new approach compared to the initial model.
Safety and Risk Management in Nuclear-Based Hydrogen Production with Thermal Water Splitting
Sep 2013
Publication
The challenges and approaches of the safety and risk management for the hydrogen production with nuclear-based thermochemical water splitting have been far from sufficiently reported as the thermochemical technology is still at a fledgling stage and the linkage of a nuclear reactor with a hydrogen production plant is unprecedented. This paper focuses on the safety issues arising from the interactions between the nuclear heat source and thermochemical hydrogen production cycle as well between the proximate individual processes in the cycle. As steam is utilized in most thermochemical cycles for the water splitting reaction and heat must be transferred from the nuclear source to hydrogen production plant this paper particularly analyzes and quantifies the heat hazard for the scenarios of start-up and shutdown of the hydrogen production plant. Potential safety impacts on the nuclear reactor are discussed. It is concluded that one of the main challenges of safety and risk management is efficient rejection of heat in a shutdown accident. Several options for the measures to be taken are suggested. Copper-chlorine and sulphur-iodine thermochemical cycles are taken as two representative examples for the hazard analysis. It is expected that these newly reported challenges and approaches could help build the future safety and risk management codes and standards for the infrastructure of the thermochemical hydrogen production.
Boundary Layer Effects on the Critical Nozzle of Hydrogen Sonic Jet
Oct 2015
Publication
When hydrogen flows through a small finite length constant exit area nozzle the viscous effects create a fluid throat which acts as a converging-diverging nozzle and lead to Mach number greater than one at the exit if the jet is under-expanded. This phenomenon influences the mass flow rate and the dispersion cloud size. In this study the boundary layer effect on the unsteady hydrogen sonic jet flow through a 1 mm diameter pipe from a high pressure reservoir (up to 70 MPa) is studied using computational fluid dynamics with a large eddy simulation turbulence model. This viscous flow simulation is compared with a non-viscous simulation to demonstrate that the velocity is supersonic at the exit of a small exit nozzle and that the mass flow is reduced.
Evaluation of Hydrogen, Propane and Methane-air Detonations Instability and Detonability
Sep 2013
Publication
In this paper the detonation propensity of different compositions of mixtures of hydrogen propane and methane with air has been evaluated over a wide range of compositions. We supplement the conventional calculations of the induction delay with calculations of the characteristic acceleration parameter recently suggested by Radulescu Sharpeand Bradley(RSB) to characterize the instability of detonations. While it is well established that the ignition delay provides a good measure for detonability the RSB acceleration or its non-dimensionalform provides a further discriminant between mixtures with similar ignition delays. The present assessment of detonability reveals that while a stoichiometric mixture of hydrogen-air has an ignition delay one and two orders of magnitude shorter than respectively propane and methane hydrogen also has a parameter smaller by respectively one and two orders of magnitude. Its smaller propensity for instability is reflected by an RSB acceleration parameter similar to the two hydrocarbons. The predictions however indicate that lean hydrogen mixtures are likely to be much more unstable than stoichiometric ones. The relation between the parameter and potential to amplify an unstable transverse wave structure has been further determined through numerical simulation of decaying reactive Taylor-Sedov blast waves. Using a simplified two-step model calibrated for these fuels we show that methane mixtures develop cellular structures more readily than propane and hydrogen when observed on similar induction time scales. Future work should be devoted towards a quantitative inclusion of the RSB parameter in assessing the detonability of a given mixture.
Hydrogen Storage: Recent Improvements and Industrial Perspectives
Sep 2017
Publication
Efficient storage of hydrogen is crucial for the success of hydrogen energy markets (early markets as well as transportation market). Hydrogen can be stored either as a compressed gas a refrigerated liquefied gas a cryo-compressed gas or in hydrides. This paper gives an overview of hydrogen storage technologies and details the specific issues and constraints related to the materials behaviour in hydrogen and conditions representative of hydrogen energy uses. It is indeed essential for the development of applications requiring long-term performance to have good understanding of long-term behaviour of the materials of the storage device and its components under operational loads.
Hydrogen-air Vented Explosions- New Experimental Data
Sep 2013
Publication
The use of hydrogen as an energy carrier is a real perspective in Europe since a number of breakthroughs obtained in the last decades open the possibility to envision a deployment at the industrial scale if safety issues are duly accounted. However on this particular aspects experimental data are still lacking especially about the explosion dynamics in realistic dimensions. The purpose of this paper is to provide a set of totally new and well instrumented hydrogen - air vented explosions. Experiments were performed in a large explosion chamber within the scope of the DIMITRHY project (sponsored by the National French Agency for Research). The 4 m3 rectangular experimental chamber (2 m height 2 m width and 1 m depth) is equipped with transparent walls and is vented (0.25 and 0.5 m2 square vents).. Six pressure gauges were used to measure the overpressure evolution inside and outside the chamber. Six concentration gauges were used to control the hydrogen repartition in the vessel. The hydrogen-air cloud was seeded with micro particles of ammonium chloride to see the propagation of the flame the movement of the cloud inside and outside the chamber. The incidence of reactivity vent size ignition position and non homogenous repartition of hydrogen received a particular attention.
Hydrogen Explosion Hazards Limitation in Battery Rooms with Different Ventilation Systems
Sep 2019
Publication
When charging most types of industrial lead-acid batteries hydrogen gas is emitted. A large number of batteries especially in relatively small areas/enclosures and in the absence of an adequate ventilation system may create an explosion hazard. This paper describes full scale tests in confined space which demonstrate conditions that can occur in a battery room in the event of a ventilation system breakdown. Over the course of the tests full scale hydrogen emission experiments were performed to study emission time and flammable cloud formation according to the assumed emission velocity. On this basis the characteristics of dispersion of hydrogen in the battery room were obtained. The CFD model Fire Dynamic Simulator (NIST) was used for confirmation that the lack of ventilation in a battery room can be the cause of an explosive atmosphere developing and leading to a potential huge explosive hazard. It was demonstrated that different ventilation systems provide battery rooms with varying efficiencies of hydrogen removal. The most effective type appeared to be natural ventilation which proved more effective than mechanical means.
Cryogenic Hydrogen Jets: Flammable Envelope Size and Hazard Distances for Jet Fire
Sep 2019
Publication
Engineering tools for calculation of hazard distances for cryogenic hydrogen jets are currently missing. This study aims at the development of validated correlations for calculation of hazard distances for cryogenic unignited releases and jet fires. The experiments performed by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) on jets from storage temperature in the range 46-295 K and pressure up to 6 bar abs are used to expand the validation domain of the correlations. The Ulster’s under-expanded jet theory is applied to calculate parameters at the real nozzle exit. The similarity law for concentration decay in momentum-dominated jets is shown to be capable to reproduce experimental data of SNL on 9 unignited cryogenic releases. The accuracy of the similarity law to predict experimentally measured axial concentration decay improves with the increase of the release diameter. This is thought due to decrease of the effect of friction and minor losses for large release orifices. The dimensionless flame length correlation is applied to analyse 30 cryogenic jet fire tests. The deviation of calculated flame length from measured in experiments is mostly within acceptable accuracy for engineering correlations 20% similarly to releases from storage and equipment at atmospheric temperatures. It is concluded that the similarity law and the dimensionless flame correlation can be used as universal engineering tools for calculation of hazard distances for hydrogen releases at any storage temperature including cryogenic.
Accumulation of Hydrogen Released into a Vented Enclosure - Experimental Results
Sep 2013
Publication
This paper reports experimental results from a series of experiments in which gaseous hydrogen was released into a 31 m3 enclosure and the hydrogen concentrations at a number of points within the enclosure were monitored to assess whether hydrogen accumulation occurred and whether a homogeneous or stratified mixture was formed. The enclosure was located in the open air and therefore subject to realistic and therefore variable wind conditions. The hydrogen release rate and the passive vent arrangements were varied. The experiments were carried out as part of the EU Hyindoor Project.
The Pressure Peaking Phenomenon: Validation for Unignited Releases in Laboratory-scale Enclosure
Oct 2015
Publication
This study is aimed at the validation of the pressure peaking phenomenon against laboratory-scale experiments. The phenomenon was discovered recently as a result of analytical and numerical studies performed at Ulster University. The phenomenon is characterized by the existence of a peak on the overpressure transient in an enclosure with vent(s) at some conditions. The peak overpressure can significantly exceed the steady-state pressure and jeopardise a civil structure integrity causing serious life safety and property protection problems. However the experimental validation of the phenomenon was absent until recently. The validation experiments were performed at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology within the framework of the HyIndoor project. Tests were carried out with release of three different gases (air helium and hydrogen) within a laboratory-scale enclosure of about 1 m3 volume with a vent of comparatively small size. The model of pressure peaking phenomenon reproduced closely the experimental pressure dynamics within the enclosure for all three used gases. The prediction of pressure peaking phenomenon consists of two steps which are explained in detail. Examples of calculation for typical hydrogen applications are presented.
3D Risk Management for Hydrogen Installations (HY3DRM)
Oct 2015
Publication
This paper introduces the 3D risk management (3DRM) concept with particular emphasis on hydrogen installations (Hy3DRM). The 3DRM framework entails an integrated solution for risk management that combines a detailed site-specific 3D geometry model a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) tool for simulating flow-related accident scenarios methodology for frequency analysis and quantitative risk assessment (QRA) and state-of-the-art visualization techniques for risk communication and decision support. In order to reduce calculation time and to cover escalating accident scenarios involving structural collapse and projectiles the CFD-based consequence analysis can be complemented with empirical engineering models reduced order models or finite element analysis (FEA). The paper outlines the background for 3DRM and presents a proof-of-concept risk assessment for a hypothetical hydrogen filling station. The prototype focuses on dispersion fire and explosion scenarios resulting from loss of containment of gaseous hydrogen. The approach adopted here combines consequence assessments obtained with the CFD tool FLACS-Hydrogen from Gexcon and event frequencies estimated with the Hydrogen Risk Assessment Models (HyRAM) tool from Sandia to generate 3D risk contours for explosion pressure and radiation loads. For a given population density and set of harm criteria it is straightforward to extend the analysis to include personnel risk as well as risk-based design such as detector optimization. The discussion outlines main challenges and inherent limitations of the 3DRM concept as well as prospects for further development towards a fully integrated framework for risk management in organizations.
Application of Natural Ventilation Engineering Models to Hydrogen Build Up in Confined Zones
Sep 2013
Publication
Correlative engineering models (Linden 1994) are compared to recent published (Cariteau et al. (2009) Pitts et al. (2009) Barley and Gawlick (2009) Swain et al. (1999) Merilo et al. (2010)) and unpublished (CEA experiments in a 1 m3 with two openings) experimental hydrogen or helium distribution in enclosures (with one and two openings). The modelling-experiments comparison is carried out in transient and in steady state conditions. On this basis recommendations and limits of use of these models are proposed.
The Study on Permissible Value of Hydrogen Gas Concentration in Purge Gas of Fuel Cell Vehicles
Sep 2019
Publication
Ignition conditions and risks of ignition on a permissible value of hydrogen concentration in purge gas prescribed by HFCV-GTR were reevaluated. Experiments were conducted to investigate burning behavior and thermal influence of continuous evacuation of hydrogen under continuous purge of air / hydrogen premixed gas which is close to an actual purge condition of FCV and thermal evacuation of hydrogen. As a result of the re-evaluation it was shown from the viewpoint of safety that the permissible value of hydrogen concentration in purge gas prescribed by the current HFCV GTR is appropriate.
Choked Two-phase Flow with Account of Discharge Line Effects
Jan 2019
Publication
An engineering tool is presented to predict steady state two-phase choked flow through a discharge line with variable cross section with account of friction and without wall heat transfer. The tool is able to predict the distribution of all relevant physical quantities along the discharge line. Choked flow is calculated using the possible-impossible flow algorithm implemented in a way to account for possible density discontinuities along the line. Physical properties are calculated using the Helmholtz Free Energy formulation. The tool is verified against previous experiments with water and evaluated against previous experiments with cryogenic two-phase hydrogen.
Hy4Heat Safety Assessment: Precis - Work Package 7
May 2021
Publication
The Hy4Heat Safety Assessment has focused on assessing the safe use of hydrogen gas in certain types of domestic properties and buildings. The summary reports (the Precis and the Safety Assessment Conclusions Report) bring together all the findings of the work and should be looked to for context by all readers. The technical reports should be read in conjunction with the summary reports. While the summary reports are made as accessible as possible for general readers the technical reports may be most accessible for readers with a degree of technical subject matter understanding. All of the safety assessment reports have now been reviewed by the HSE.<br/><br/>This document is an overview of the Safety Assessment work undertaken as part of the Hy4Heat programme
Hydrogen as a Maritime Fuel–Can Experiences with LNG Be Transferred to Hydrogen Systems?
Jul 2021
Publication
As the use of fossil fuels becomes more and more restricted there is a need for alternative fuels also at sea. For short sea distance travel purposes batteries may be a solution. However for longer distances when there is no possibility of recharging at sea batteries do not have sufficient capacity yet. Several projects have demonstrated the use of compressed hydrogen (CH2) as a fuel for road transport. The experience with hydrogen as a maritime fuel is very limited. In this paper the similarities and differences between liquefied hydrogen (LH2) and liquefied natural gas (LNG) as a maritime fuel will be discussed based on literature data of their properties and our system knowledge. The advantages and disadvantages of the two fuels will be examined with respect to use as a maritime fuel. Our objective is to discuss if and how hydrogen could replace fossil fuels on long distance sea voyages. Due to the low temperature of LH2 and wide flammability range in air these systems have more challenges related to storage and processing onboard than LNG. These factors result in higher investment costs. All this may also imply challenges for the LH2 supply chain.
H21- Phase 1 Technical Summary Report
May 2021
Publication
The UK Government signed legislation on 27th June 2019 committing the UK to a legally binding target of Net Zero emissions by 2050. Climate change is one of the most significant technical economic social and business challenges facing the world today.
The H21 NIC Phase 1 project delivered an optimally designed experimentation and testing programme supported by the HSE Science Division and DNV GL with the aim to collect quantifiable evidence to support that the UK distribution network of 2032 will be comparably as safe operating on 100% hydrogen as it currently is on
natural gas. This innovative project begins to fill critical safety evidence gaps surrounding the conversion of the UK gas network to 100% hydrogen. This will facilitate progression towards H21 Phase 2 Operational Safety Demonstrations and the H21 Phase 3 Live Trials to promote customer acceptability and ultimately aid progress towards a government policy decision on heat.
DNV GL and HSE Science Division were engaged to undertake the experimentation testing and QRA update programme of work. DNV GL and HSE Science Division also peer reviewed each other’s programme of work at various stages throughout the project undertaking a challenge and review of the experimental data and results to provide confidence in the conclusions.
A strategic set of tests was designed to cover the range of assets represented across the Great Britain gas distribution networks. The assets used in the testing were mostly recovered from the distribution network as part of the ongoing Iron Mains Risk Reduction Replacement Programme. Controlled testing against a well-defined master testing plan with both natural gas and 100% hydrogen was then undertaken to provide the quantitative evidence to forecast any change to background leakage levels in a 100% hydrogen network.
Key Findings from Phase 1a:
The H21 NIC Phase 1 project delivered an optimally designed experimentation and testing programme supported by the HSE Science Division and DNV GL with the aim to collect quantifiable evidence to support that the UK distribution network of 2032 will be comparably as safe operating on 100% hydrogen as it currently is on
natural gas. This innovative project begins to fill critical safety evidence gaps surrounding the conversion of the UK gas network to 100% hydrogen. This will facilitate progression towards H21 Phase 2 Operational Safety Demonstrations and the H21 Phase 3 Live Trials to promote customer acceptability and ultimately aid progress towards a government policy decision on heat.
DNV GL and HSE Science Division were engaged to undertake the experimentation testing and QRA update programme of work. DNV GL and HSE Science Division also peer reviewed each other’s programme of work at various stages throughout the project undertaking a challenge and review of the experimental data and results to provide confidence in the conclusions.
A strategic set of tests was designed to cover the range of assets represented across the Great Britain gas distribution networks. The assets used in the testing were mostly recovered from the distribution network as part of the ongoing Iron Mains Risk Reduction Replacement Programme. Controlled testing against a well-defined master testing plan with both natural gas and 100% hydrogen was then undertaken to provide the quantitative evidence to forecast any change to background leakage levels in a 100% hydrogen network.
Key Findings from Phase 1a:
- Of the 215 assets tested 41 of them were found to leak 19 of them provided sufficient data to be able to compare hydrogen and methane leak rates.
- The tests showed that assets that were gas tight on methane were also gas tight on hydrogen. Assets that leaked on hydrogen also leaked
- on methane including repaired assets.
- The ratio of the hydrogen to methane volumetric leak rates varied between 1.1 and 2.2 which is largely consistent with the bounding values expected for laminar and turbulent (or inertial) flow which gave ratios of 1.2 and 2.8 respectively.
- None of the PE assets leaked; cast ductile and spun iron leaked to a similar degree (around 26-29% of all iron assets leaked) and the proportion of leaking steel assets was slightly less (14%).
- Four types of joint were responsible for most of the leaks on joints: screwed lead yarn bolted gland and hook bolts.
- All of the repairs that sealed methane leaks also were effective when tested with hydrogen.
Investigation of Turbulent Premixed Methane/Air and Hydrogen-enriched Methane/Air Flames in a Laboratory-scale Gas Turbine Model Combustor
Feb 2021
Publication
Methane and hydrogen-enriched (25 vol% and 50 vol% H2 -enriched CH4) methane/air premixed flames were investigated in a gas turbine model combustor under atmospheric conditions. The flame operability ranges were mapped at different Reynold numbers (Re) showing the dependence on Re and H2 concentrations. The effects of equivalence ratio (Φ) Re and H2 enrichment on flame structure were examined employing OH-PLIF measurement. For CH4/air cases the flame was stabilized with an M shape; while for H2 -enriched cases the flame transitions to a П shape above a specific Φ. This transition was observed to influence significantly the flashback limits. The flame shape transition is most likely a result of H2 enrichment occurring due to the increase in flame speed higher resistance of the flame to the strain rate and change in the inner recirculation zone. Flow fields of CH4/air flames were compared between low and high Re cases employing high-speed PIV. The flashback events led by two mechanisms (combustion-induced vortex breakdown CIVB and boundary-layer flashback BLF) were observed and recorded using high-speed OH chemiluminescence imaging. It was found that the CIVB flashback occurred only for CH4 flames with M shape whereas the BLF occurs for all H2 -enriched flames with П shape.
Evaluation of Safety Measures of a Hydrogen Fueling Station Using Physical Modeling
Oct 2018
Publication
Hydrogen fueling stations are essential for operating fuel cell vehicles. If multiple safety measures in a hydrogen fueling station fail simultaneously it could lead to severe consequences. To analyze the risk of such a situation we developed a physical model of a hydrogen fueling station which when using the temperature pressure and flow rate of hydrogen could be simulated under normal and abnormal operating states. The physical model was validated by comparing the analytical results with the experimental results of an actual hydrogen fueling station. By combining the physical model with a statistical method we evaluated the significance of the safety measures in the event wherein multiple safety measures fail simultaneously. We determined the combinations of failures of safety measures that could lead to accidents and suggested a measure for preventing and mitigating the accident scenario.
Loss of Integrity of Hydrogen Technologies: A Critical Review
Jul 2020
Publication
Hydrogen is one of the main candidates in replacing fossil fuels in the forthcoming years. However hydrogen technologies must deal with safety aspects due to the specific substance properties. This study aims to provide an overview on the loss of integrity (LOI) of hydrogen equipment which may lead to serious consequences such as fires and explosions. Substantial information regarding the hydrogen lifecycle its properties and safety related aspects has gathered. Furthermore focus has placed on the phenomena responsible for the LOI (e.g. hydrogen embrittlement) and material selection for hydrogen services. Moreover a systematic review on the hydrogen LOI topic has conducted to identify and connect the most relevant and active research group within the topic. In conclusion a significant dearth of knowledge in material behaviour of hydrogen technologies has highlighted. It is thought that is possible to bridge this gap by strengthening the collaborations between scientists from different research fields.
Homogeneous Hydrogen Deflagrations in Small Scale Enclosure. Experimental Results
Sep 2017
Publication
University of Pisa performed experimental tests in a 1m3 facility which shape and dimensions resemble a gas cabinet for the HySEA project founded by the Fuel Cells and Hydrogen 2 Joint Undertaking with the aim to conduct pre-normative research on vented deflagrations in real-life enclosures and containers used for hydrogen energy applications in order to generate experimental data of high quality. The test facility named Small Scale Enclosure (SSE) had a vent area of 042m2 which location could be varied namely on the top or in front of the facility while different types of vent were investigated. Three different ignition location were investigated as well and the range of Hydrogen concentration ranged between 10 and 18% vol. This paper is aimed to summarize the main characteristics of the experimental campaign as well as to present its results.
Residual Performance of Composite Pressure Vessels Submitted to Mechanical Impacts
Sep 2017
Publication
Type IV pressure vessels are commonly used for hydrogen on-board stationary or bulk storages. During their lifetime they can be submitted to mechanical impacts creating damage within the composite structure not necessarily correlated to what is visible from the outside. When an impact is suspected or when a cylinder is periodically inspected it is necessary to determine whether it can safely stay in service or not. The FCH JU project Hypactor aims at creating a large database of impacts characterized by various non destructive testing (NDT) methods in order to provide reliable pass-fail criteria for damaged cylinders. This paper presents some of the tests results investigating short term burst) and long term (cycling) performance of impacted cylinders and the recommendations that can be made for impact testing and NDT criteria calibration.
Validation of a 3d Multiphase-multicomponent CFD Model for Accidental Liquid and Gaseous Hydrogen Releases
Sep 2017
Publication
As hydrogen-air mixtures are flammable in a wide range of concentrations and the minimum ignition energy is low compared to hydrocarbon fuels the safe handling of hydrogen is of utmost importance. Additional hazards may arise with the accidental spill of liquid hydrogen. Such a release of LH2 leads to a formation of a cryogenic pool a dynamic vaporization process and consequently a dispersion of gaseous hydrogen into the environment. Several LH2 release experiments as well as modelling approaches address this phenomenology. In contrast to existing approaches a new CFD model capable of simulating liquid and gaseous distribution was developed at Forschungszentrum Jülich. It is validated against existing experiments and yields no substantial lacks in the physical model and reveals a qualitatively consistent prediction. Nevertheless the deviation between experiment and simulation raises questions on the completeness of the database in particular with regard to the boundary conditions and available measurements.
The Residual Strength of Automotive Hydrogen Cylinders After Exposure to Flames
Sep 2017
Publication
Fuel cell vehicles and some compressed natural gas vehicles are equipped with carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) composite cylinders. Each of the cylinders has a pressure relief device designed to detect heat and release the internal gas to prevent the cylinder from bursting in a vehicle fire accident. Yet in some accident situations the fire may be extinguished before the pressure relief device is activated leaving the high-pressure fuel gas inside the fire-damaged cylinder. To handle such a cylinder safely after an accident it is necessary that the cylinder keeps a sufficient post-fire strength against its internal gas pressure but in most cases it is difficult to accurately determine cylinder strength at the accident site. One way of solving this problem is to predetermine the post-fire burst strengths of cylinders by experiments. In this study automotive CFRP cylinders having no pressure relief device were exposed to a fire to the verge of bursting; then after the fire was extinguished the residual burst strengths and the overall physical state of the test cylinders were examined. The results indicated that the test cylinders all recorded a residual burst strength at least twice greater than their internal gas pressure for tested cylinders with new cylinder burst to nominal working pressure in the range 2.67–4.92 above the regulated ratio of 2.25.
Deflagration-to-detonation Transition of H2-CO-Air Mixtures in a Partially Obstructed Channel
Sep 2019
Publication
In this study an explosion channel is used to investigate flame dynamics in homogeneous hydrogencarbon monoxide-air (H2-CO-air) mixtures. The test rig is a small scale 6 m channel at a rectangular cross section of 300x60 mm. Obstacles of a blockage ratio of BR=60% and a spacing of s=300mm are placed in first part of the channel. A 2.05 m long unobstructed part in the rear of the channel allows for investigation of freely propagating flames and detonations. The fuel composition is varied from 100/0 to 50/50 Vol.-% H2/CO mixtures. The overall fuel content ranges from 15 to 40 Vol.-% in air aiming to obtain fast flames and deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT). Flame speed and dynamic pressure data are evaluated. Results extend data obtained by [1] and can be used for validation of numerical frameworks. Limits for fast flames and DDT in homogeneous H2-CO-air mixtures at the given geometry are presented.
Review of the Durability of Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell in Long-Term Operation: Main Influencing Parameters and Testing Protocols
Jul 2021
Publication
Durability is the most pressing issue preventing the efficient commercialization of polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) stationary and transportation applications. A big barrier to overcoming the durability limitations is gaining a better understanding of failure modes for user profiles. In addition durability test protocols for determining the lifetime of PEMFCs are important factors in the development of the technology. These methods are designed to gather enough data about the cell/stack to understand its efficiency and durability without causing it to fail. They also provide some indication of the cell/stack’s age in terms of changes in performance over time. Based on a study of the literature the fundamental factors influencing PEMFC long-term durability and the durability test protocols for both PEMFC stationary and transportation applications were discussed and outlined in depth in this review. This brief analysis should provide engineers and researchers with a fast overview as well as a useful toolbox for investigating PEMFC durability issues.
Ignition of H2-NO2/N2O4 Mixtures Under Volumetric Expansion Conditions
Sep 2019
Publication
The competition between chemical energy release rate and volumetric expansion related to shock wave’s dynamics is of primary importance for a number of situations relevant to explosion safety. While studies have been performed on this topic over the years they have been limited to mixtures with monotonous energy release profile. In the present study the ignition of H2-NO2/N2O4 mixtures which exhibit a single-step or a two-step energy release rate profile depending on the equivalence ratio has been investigated under volumetric expansion conditions. The rate of expansion has been calculated using the Taylor-Sedov solution and accounted for using 0-D numerical simulations with time-dependent specific volume. The results were analyzed in terms of a Damkohler number defined as the ratio of the expansion to ignition times. For mixtures with non-monotonous energy release rate profiles two critical Damkohler numbers can be identified one for each of the steps of energy release. It was also shown that the fluid element which is the most likely to ignite corresponds to the one behind a shock propagating at the Chapman-Jouguet velocity. The thermo-chemical dynamics have been analyzed about the critical conditions using energy release rate per reaction rate of production and sensitivity analyses.
Hydrogen Odorant and Leak Detection: Part 1, Hydrogen Odorant - Project Closure Report
Nov 2020
Publication
This work programme was focused on identifying a suitable odorant for use in a 100% hydrogen gas grid (domestic use such as boilers and cookers). The research involved a review of existing odorants (used primarily for natural gas) and the selection of five suitable odorants based on available literature. One odorant was selected based on possible suitability with a Polymer Electrolyte Membrane (PEM) based fuel cell vehicle which could in future be a possible end-user of grid hydrogen. NPL prepared Primary Reference Materials containing the five odorants in hydrogen at the relevant amount fraction levels (as would be found in the grid) including ones provided by Robinson Brothers (the supplier of odorants for natural gas in the UK). These mixtures were used by NPL to perform tests to understand the effects of the mixtures on pipeline (metal and plastic) appliances (a hydrogen boiler provided by Worcester Bosch) and PEM fuel cells. HSE investigated the health and environmental impact of these odorants in hydrogen. Olfactory testing was performed by Air Spectrum to characterise the ‘smell’ of each odorant. Finally an economic analysis was performed by E4tech. The results confirm that Odorant NB would be a suitable odorant for use in a 100% hydrogen gas grid for combustion applications but further research would be required if the intention is to supply grid hydrogen to stationery fuel cells or fuel cell vehicles. In this case further testing would need to be performed to measure the extent of fuel cell degradation caused by the non-sulphur odorant obtained as part of this work programme and also other UK projects such as the Hydrogen Grid to Vehicle (HG2V) project would provide important information about whether a purification step would be required regardless of the odorant before the hydrogen purity would be suitable for a PEM fuel cell vehicle. If purification was required it would be fine to use Odorant NB as this would be removed during the purification step.
This report and any attachment is freely available on the ENA Smarter Networks Portal here. IGEM Members can download the report and any attachment directly by clicking on the pdf icon above.
This report and any attachment is freely available on the ENA Smarter Networks Portal here. IGEM Members can download the report and any attachment directly by clicking on the pdf icon above.
Simulation of Deflagration-to-detonation Transition of Lean H2-CO-Air Mixtures in Obstructed Channels
Sep 2019
Publication
The possibility of flame acceleration (FA) and deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT) when homogeneous hydrogen-carbon monoxide-air (H2-CO-air) mixtures are used rises the need for an efficient simulation approach for safety assessment. In this study a modelling approach for H2-CO-air flames incorporating deflagration and detonation within one framework is presented. It extends the previous work on H2-air mixtures. The deflagration is simulated by means of the turbulent flame speed closure model incorporating a quenching term. Since high flow velocities e.g. the characteristic speed of sound of the combustion products are reached during FA the flow passing obstacles generates turbulence at high enough levels to partially quench the flame. Partial flame quenching has the potential to stall the onset of detonation. An altered formulation for quenching is introduced to the modelling approach to better account for the combustion characteristics for accelerating lean H2-CO-air flames. The presented numerical approach is validated with experimental flame velocity data of the small-scale GraVent test rig [1] with homogeneous fuel contents of 22.5 and 25.0 vol-% and fuel compositions of 75/25 and 50/50 vol-% H2/CO respectively. The impact of the quenching term is further discussed on simulations of the FZK-7.2m test rig [2] whose obstacle spacing is smaller than the spacing in the GraVent test rig.
CFD Modelling of Underexpanded Hydrogen Jets Exiting Rectangular Shaped Openings
May 2020
Publication
Underexpanded jet releases from circular nozzles have been studied extensively both experimentally and numerically. However jet releases from rectangular openings have received much less attention and information on their dispersion behaviour is not as widely available. In this paper Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is used to assess the suitability of using a pseudo-source approach to model jet releases from rectangular openings. A comparative study is performed to evaluate the effect of nozzle shape on jet structure and dispersion characteristics for underexpanded hydrogen jet releases. Jet releases issuing from a circular nozzle and rectangular nozzles with aspect ratios ranging from two to eight are modelled including resolution of the near-field behaviour. The experimental work of Ruggles and Ekoto (2012 2014) is used as a basis for validating the modelling approach used and an additional case study in which jets with a stagnation-to-ambient pressure ratio of 300:1 are modelled is also performed. The CFD results show that for the 10:1 pressure ratio release the hazard volume and hazard distance remain largely unaffected by nozzle shape. For the higher pressure release the hazard volume is larger for the rectangular nozzle releases than the equivalent release through a circular orifice though the distance to lower flammability limit is comparable across the range of nozzle shapes considered. For both of the release pressures simulated the CFD results illustrate that a pseudo-source approach produces conservative results for all nozzle shapes considered. This finding has useful practical implications for consequence analysis in industrial applications such as the assessment of leaks from flanges and connections in pipework.
Risk Assessment and Ventilation Modeling for Hydrogen Vehicle Repair Garages
Sep 2019
Publication
The availability of repair garage infrastructure for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles is becoming increasingly important for future industry growth. Ventilation requirements for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles can affect both retrofitted and purpose-built repair garages and the costs associated with these requirements can be significant. A hazard and operability (HAZOP) study was performed to identify key risk-significant scenarios related to hydrogen vehicles in a repair garage. Detailed simulations and modeling were performed using appropriate computational tools to estimate the location behaviour and severity of hydrogen release based on key HAZOP scenarios. This work compares current fire code requirements to an alternate ventilation strategy to further reduce potential hazardous conditions. It is shown that position direction and velocity of ventilation have a significant impact on the amount of flammable mass in the domain.
Transferring the Retail of Hydrogen Economy and Missing Safety Assurance
Sep 2019
Publication
Australian regional communities are moving ahead of governments. Enterprising individuals are pushing ahead to find global solutions to local issues that governments (local or state or federal) have abandoned stalled mothballed or failed to resolve. We are faced with a flaw in retail of hydrogen economy as fatal as Walgett running dry or a million fish killed in Murray-Darling. The challenge in Australian regional communities will be to interpret safety assurance requirements in an appropriate manner even in severe economic swings such as drought bushfire or floods. In this context the efficacious cultural embrace by regional communities of three key program elements is essential - Australian Hydrogen Safety Panel Hydrogen Safety Knowledge Tools and Dissemination Hydrogen Safety First Responder Training. What are the odds of no accident in retailing hydrogen for examples to vehicles? Place is everything in regional communities of Australia because in nature (as in the ocean) there is no spin. This paper examines the safety assurance issues associated with the cultural integration of Hydrogen’s three key program elements in a country Australia that is fed-up with government.
Vented Explosion of Hydrogen/Air Mixtures: Influence of Vent Cover and Stratification
Sep 2017
Publication
Explosion venting is a prevention/mitigation solution widely used in the process industry to protect indoor equipment or buildings from excessive internal pressure caused by an accidental explosion. Vented explosions are widely investigated in the literature for various geometries hydrogen/air concentrations ignition positions initial turbulence etc. In real situations the vents are normally covered by a vent panel. In the case of an indoor leakage the hydrogen/air cloud will be stratified rather than homogeneous. Nowadays there is a lack in understanding about the vented explosion of stratified clouds and about the influence of vent cover inertia on the internal overpressure. This paper aims at shedding light on these aspects by means of experimental investigation of vented hydrogen/air deflagration using an experimental facility of 1m3 and via numerical simulations using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code FLACS
Experimental Investigation of Unconfined Spherical and Cylindrical Flame Propagation in Hydrogen-air Mixtures
Sep 2019
Publication
This paper presents results of experimental investigations on spherical and cylindrical flame propagation in pre-mixed H2/air-mixtures in unconfined and semi-confined geometries. The experiments were performed in a facility consisting of two transparent solid walls with 1 m2 area and four weak side walls made from thin plastic film. The gap size between the solid walls was varied stepwise from thin layer geometry (6 mm) to cube geometry (1 m). A wide range of H2/air-mixtures with volumetric hydrogen concentrations from 10% to 45% H2 was ignited between the transparent solid walls. The propagating flame front and its structure was observed with a large scale high speed shadow system. Results of spherical and cylindrical flame propagation up to a radius of 0.5 m were analyzed. The presented spherical burning velocity model is used to discuss the self-acceleration phenomena in unconfined and unobstructed pre-mixed H2/air flames.
Analysis of Hydrogen-Induced Changes in the Cyclic Deformation Behaviour of AISI 300–Series Austenitic Stainless Steels Using Cyclic Indentation Testing
Jun 2021
Publication
The locally occurring mechanisms of hydrogen embrittlement significantly influence the fatigue behaviour of a material which was shown in previous research on two different AISI 300-series austenitic stainless steels with different austenite stabilities. In this preliminary work an enhanced fatigue crack growth as well as changes in crack initiation sites and morphology caused by hydrogen were observed. To further analyze the results obtained in this previous research in the present work the local cyclic deformation behaviour of the material volume was analyzed by using cyclic indentation testing. Moreover these results were correlated to the local dislocation structures obtained with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) in the vicinity of fatigue cracks. The cyclic indentation tests show a decreased cyclic hardening potential as well as an increased dislocation mobility for the conditions precharged with hydrogen which correlates to the TEM analysis revealing courser dislocation cells in the vicinity of the fatigue crack tip. Consequently the presented results indicate that the hydrogen enhanced localized plasticity (HELP) mechanism leads to accelerated crack growth and change in crack morphology for the materials investigated. In summary the cyclic indentation tests show a high potential for an analysis of the effects of hydrogen on the local cyclic deformation behaviour.
Thermal Radiation from Cryogenic Hydrogen Jet Fires
Sep 2017
Publication
The thermal hazards from ignited under-expanded cryogenic releases are not yet fully understood and reliable predictive tools are missing. This study aims at validation of a CFD model to simulate flame length and radiative heat flux for cryogenic hydrogen jet fires. The simulation results are compared against the experimental data by Sandia National Laboratories on cryogenic hydrogen fires from storage with pressure up to 5 bar abs and temperature in the range 48–82 K. The release source is modelled using the Ulster's notional nozzle theory. The problem is considered as steady-state. Three turbulence models were applied and their performance was compared. The realizable k-ε model showed the best agreement with experimental flame length and radiative heat flux. Therefore it has been employed in the CFD model along with Eddy Dissipation Concept for combustion and Discrete Ordinates (DO) model for radiation. A parametric study has been conducted to assess the effect of selected numerical and physical parameters on the simulations capability to reproduce experimental data. DO model discretisation is shown to strongly affect simulations indicating 10 × 10 as minimum number of angular divisions to provide a convergence. The simulations have shown sensitivity to experimental parameters such as humidity and exhaust system volumetric flow rate highlighting the importance of accurate and extended publication of experimental data to conduct precise numerical studies. The simulations correctly reproduced the radiative heat flux from cryogenic hydrogen jet fire at different locations.
Safety System Design for Mitigating Risks of Intended Hydrogen Releases from Thermally Activated Pressure Relief Device of Onboard Storage
Sep 2019
Publication
All vehicular high-pressure hydrogen tanks are equipped with thermally-activated pressure relief devices (TPRDs) required by Global Technical Regulation. This safety device significantly reduces the risk of tank catastrophic rupture by venting the hydrogen pressure outside. However the released flammable hydrogen raises additional safety problems. Japan Automobile Research Institute has demonstrated that in the vehicle fire event once the TPRD opens the hydrogen fires will engulf the whole vehicle making it difficult for the drivers and passenger to evacuate from the vehicle. This paper designs a new safety system to solve the evacuation problem. The safety system includes a rotatable pressure relief device with a motor a sensory system that consists of infrared sensors ultrasonic radar and temperature sensors a central control unit and an alarm device. The new design of the pressure relief device allows the system actively adjusting the release direction towards void open space outside the vehicle to minimize the risks of hydrogen fires. The infrared sensors located at the roof of the vehicles collect info inside the vehicle and the ultrasonic radar detect the region outside the vehicle. Temperature sensors tell when to trigger the alarm and set the motor in standby mode and the central control unit determines where to rotate based on the info from the infrared sensors and ultrasonic radars. A control strategy is also proposed to operate the safety system in an appropriate way. The cost-benefit analysis show that the new safety system can significantly reduce the risks of intended hydrogen releases from onboard pressure relief devices with total cost increases by less than 1% of the vehicle cost making it a good cost-effective engineering solution.
Understanding and Mitigating Hydrogen Embrittlement of Steels: A Review of Experimental, Modelling and Design Progress from Atomistic to Continuum
Feb 2018
Publication
Hydrogen embrittlement is a complex phenomenon involving several lengthand timescales that affects a large class of metals. It can significantly reduce the ductility and load-bearing capacity and cause cracking and catastrophic brittle failures at stresses below the yield stress of susceptible materials. Despite a large research effort in attempting to understand the mechanisms of failure and in developing potential mitigating solutions hydrogen embrittlement mechanisms are still not completely understood. There are controversial opinions in the literature regarding the underlying mechanisms and related experimental evidence supporting each of these theories. The aim of this paper is to provide a detailed review up to the current state of the art on the effect of hydrogen on the degradation of metals with a particular focus on steels. Here we describe the effect of hydrogen in steels from the atomistic to the continuum scale by reporting theoretical evidence supported by quantum calculation and modern experimental characterisation methods macroscopic effects that influence the mechanical properties of steels and established damaging mechanisms for the embrittlement of steels. Furthermore we give an insight into current approaches and new mitigation strategies used to design new steels resistant to hydrogen embrittlement.<br/>*Correction published see Supplements section
Safety Code Equivalencies in Hydrogen Infrastructure Deployment
Sep 2019
Publication
Various studies and market trends show that the number of hydrogen fuelling stations will increase to the thousands in the US by 2050. NFPA 2 Hydrogen Technologies Code (NFPA2) the nationally adopted primary code governing hydrogen safety is relatively new and hydrogen vehicle technology is a relatively new and rapidly developing technology. In order to effectively aid and accelerate the deployment of standardized retail hydrogen fuelling facilities the permitting of hydrogen fuelling stations employing outdoor bulk liquid storage in the state of California.
In an effort to better understand how the applicants consultants and more importantly the Authorities Having Jurisdiction (AHJ)s are interpreting and applying the NFPA 2 especially for complex applications the newest hydrogen stations with the largest amount of bulk hydrogen storage in urban environment settings were identified and the permit applications and permit approval outcomes of the said stations were analysed. Utilizing the pubic record request process LH2 station permit applications were reviewed along with the approval outcomes directly from the municipalities that issued the permits. AHJs with H2 station permitting experience were interviewed. Case studies of permit hydrogen fuelling station permit applications were then complied to document both the perspectives of the applicant and the AHJ and the often iterative and collaborative nature of permitting.
The current permitting time for Liquid Hydrogen (LH2) stations can range from 9 to 18 months in the California. Five out of the six LH2 stations applications required Alternative Means & Methods (AM&Ms) proposals and deviations from the prescriptive requirements of the Code were granted. Furthermore AHJs often requested additional documents and studies specific to application parameters in addition to NFPA 2 requirements.
In an effort to better understand how the applicants consultants and more importantly the Authorities Having Jurisdiction (AHJ)s are interpreting and applying the NFPA 2 especially for complex applications the newest hydrogen stations with the largest amount of bulk hydrogen storage in urban environment settings were identified and the permit applications and permit approval outcomes of the said stations were analysed. Utilizing the pubic record request process LH2 station permit applications were reviewed along with the approval outcomes directly from the municipalities that issued the permits. AHJs with H2 station permitting experience were interviewed. Case studies of permit hydrogen fuelling station permit applications were then complied to document both the perspectives of the applicant and the AHJ and the often iterative and collaborative nature of permitting.
The current permitting time for Liquid Hydrogen (LH2) stations can range from 9 to 18 months in the California. Five out of the six LH2 stations applications required Alternative Means & Methods (AM&Ms) proposals and deviations from the prescriptive requirements of the Code were granted. Furthermore AHJs often requested additional documents and studies specific to application parameters in addition to NFPA 2 requirements.
Highly Resolved Large Eddy Simulation of Subsonic Hydrogen Jets – Evaluation of ADREA-HF Code Against Detailed Experiments
Sep 2019
Publication
The main objective of this work is the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) of hydrogen subsonic jets in order to evaluate modelling strategies and to provide guidelines for similar simulations. The ADREAHF code and the experiments conducted by Sandia National Laboratories are used for that purpose. These experiments are particularly ideal for LES studies because turbulent fluctuations have been measured which is something rare in hydrogen experiments. Hydrogen is released vertically from a small orifice of 1.91 mm diameter into an unconfined stagnant environment. Three experimental cases are simulated with different inlet velocity (49.7 76.0 and 133.9 m/s) which corresponds to transitional or turbulent flows. Hydrogen mass fraction and velocity mean values and fluctuations are compared against the experimental data. The Smagorinsky subgrid-scale model is mainly used. In the 49.7 m/s case the RNG LES is also evaluated. Several grid resolutions are used to assess the effect on the results. The amount of the resolved by the LES turbulence and velocity spectra are presented. Finally the effect of the release modelling is discussed.
Near-term Location of Hydrogen Refueling Stations in Yokohama City from the Perspective of Safety
Sep 2019
Publication
The roll-out of hydrogen refuelling stations is a key step in the transition to a hydrogen economy. Since Japan has been shifting from the demonstration stage to the implementation stage of a hydrogen economy a near-term city-level roll-out plan is required. The aim of this study is to plan near-term locations for building hydrogen refuelling stations in Yokohama City from a safety perspective. Our planning provides location information for hydrogen refuelling stations in Yokohama City for the period 2020–2030. Mobile type and parallel siting type refuelling stations have been considered in our planning and locations were determined by matching supply and demand to safety concerns. Supply and demand were estimated from hybrid vehicle ownership data and from space availability in existing gas stations. The results reaffirmed the importance of hydrogen station location planning and showed that use of mobile type stations is a suitable solution in response to the uncertain fuel cell vehicle fuel demand level during the implementation stage of a hydrogen economy.
Study on Behavior of Ambient Hydraulic Cycling Test for 70 MPA Type-3 Hydrogen Composite Cylinder
Sep 2013
Publication
Hydrogen used in hydrogen fuel cell vehicles is the flammable gas which has wide flammable range and flame propagation speed is very fast. This fuel cell vehicle equipped with high-pressure vessel in the form of fuel to supply the high pressure hydrogen storage system needs to be checked carefully about a special safety design and exact weak point for high pressure repeated fatigue. 70 L liner and 70 MPa Type-3 vessel were tested using the equipments which can perform ambient hydraulic cycling test and burst test in the Korea Gas Safety Corporation. And it was performed to identify the internal external behaviour through the Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and real leakage mode for high pressure repeated fatigue when subjected to be pressurized in vessel. 70 L liner and 70 MPa Type-3 vessel were tested using the equipments which can perform ambient hydraulic cycling test and burst test in the Korea Gas Safety Corporation. And it was performed to identify the internal external behaviour through the Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and real leakage mode for high pressure repeated fatigue when subjected to be pressurized in vessel. Through this study liner of type-3 hydrogen vessel is ruptured first on cylindrical (body) part than Dome part in 8.5 MPa. Also the same Phenomena are confirmed through the Finite Element Analysis (FEA). External composite leakage mode in ambient hydraulic cycling test was occurred in different area such as the Dome Dome knuckle and cylindrical (body) parts. But cracks of inner liner for gas tight were occurred in only cylindrical (body) parts. Also in FEA results when vessel is pressurized Dome knuckle and cylindrical (body) parts is weakest among all parts because of expansion of cylindrical (body) parts.
Hy4Heat Annex To Site Specific Safety Case for Hydrogen Community Demonstration - Work Package 7
May 2021
Publication
The Hy4Heat Safety Assessment has focused on assessing the safe use of hydrogen gas in certain types of domestic properties and buildings. The summary reports (the Precis and the Safety Assessment Conclusions Report) bring together all the findings of the work and should be looked to for context by all readers. The technical reports should be read in conjunction with the summary reports. While the summary reports are made as accessible as possible for general readers the technical reports may be most accessible for readers with a degree of technical subject matter understanding. All of the safety assessment reports have now been reviewed by the HSE<br/>Annex prepared to support Site Specific Safety Cases for hydrogen gas community demonstrations based on work undertaken by the Hy4Heat programme. It covers a collection of recommended risk reduction measures for application downstream of the Emergency Control Valve (ECV)
Prediction of Hydrogen Concentration in Containment During Severe Accidents Using Fuzzy Neural Network
Jan 2015
Publication
Recently severe accidents in nuclear power plants (NPPs) have become a global concern. The aim of this paper is to predict the hydrogen buildup within containment resulting from severe accidents. The prediction was based on NPPs of an optimized power reactor 1000. The increase in the hydrogen concentration in severe accidents is one of the major factors that threaten the integrity of the containment. A method using a fuzzy neural network (FNN) was applied to predict the hydrogen concentration in the containment. The FNN model was developed and verified based on simulation data acquired by simulating MAAP4 code for optimized power reactor 1000. The FNN model is expected to assist operators to prevent a hydrogen explosion in severe accident situations and manage the accident properly because they are able to predict the changes in the trend of hydrogen concentration at the beginning of real accidents by using the developed FNN model.
Characterization of Hydrogen Transport Accidents in Japan Based on Network Theory
Sep 2019
Publication
Realizing the hydrogen economy in Japan entails a risk assessment of its domestic hydrogen supply especially hydrogen transport by road. The first step of the risk assessment is to characterize the hydrogen transport accidents from different energy carriers. However it is difficult to characterize the accidents because hydrogen transport systems have not been fully implemented in Japan. The aim of this study is to characterize the hydrogen transport accidents from different energy carriers in Japan. We studied three major energy carriers namely compressed hydrogen liquefied hydrogen and liquid organic hydride. The accident networks based on network theory were constructed to capture the comprehensive accident processes and quantitatively characterized the hydrogen transport accidents from different energy carriers. The results clarified the differences and similarities in the accident process amongst the energy carriers. Furthermore key accident events were identified. This study contributes to the development of comprehensive hydrogen transport accident scenarios for risk assessment.
Modeling of Sudden Hydrogen Expansion from Cryogenic Pressure Vessel Failure
Sep 2011
Publication
We have modelled sudden hydrogen expansion from a cryogenic pressure vessel. This model considers real gas equations of state single and two-phase flow and the specific “vessel within vessel” geometry of cryogenic vessels. The model can solve sudden hydrogen expansion for initial pressures up to 1210 bar and for initial temperatures ranging from 27 to 400 K. For practical reasons our study focuses on hydrogen release from 345 bar with temperatures between 62 K and 300 K. The pressure vessel internal volume is 151 L. The results indicate that cryogenic pressure vessels may offer a safety advantage with respect to compressed hydrogen vessels because i) the vacuum jacket protects the pressure vessel from environmental damage ii) hydrogen when released discharges first into an intermediate chamber before reaching the outside environment and iii) working temperature is typically much lower and thus the hydrogen has less energy. Results indicate that key expansion parameters such as pressure rate of energy release and thrust are all considerably lower for a cryogenic vessel within vessel geometry as compared to ambient temperature compressed gas vessels. Future work will focus on taking advantage of these favourable conditions to attempt fail-safe cryogenic vessel designs that do not harm people or property even after catastrophic failure of the inner pressure vessel.
Hydrogen Safety, Training and Risk Assessment System
Sep 2007
Publication
The rapid evolution of information related to hydrogen safety is multidimensional ranging from developing codes and standards to CFD simulations and experimental studies of hydrogen releases to a variety of risk assessment approaches. This information needs to be transformed into system design risk decision-making and first responder tools for use by hydrogen community stakeholders. The Canadian Transportation Fuel Cell Alliance (CTFCA) has developed HySTARtm an interactive Hydrogen Safety Training And Risk System. The HySTARtm user interacts with a Web-based 3-D graphical user interface to input hydrogen system configurations. The system includes a Codes and Standards Expert System that identifies the applicable codes and standards in a number of national jurisdictions that apply to the facility and its components. A Siting Compliance and Planning Expert System assesses compliance with clearance distance requirements in these jurisdictions. Incorporating the results of other CTFCA projects HySTARtm identifies stand-out hydrogen release scenarios and their corresponding release condition that serves as input to built-in consequence and risk assessment programs that output a variety of risk assessment metrics. The latter include on- and off-site individual risk probability of loss of life and expected number of fatalities. These results are displayed on the graphical user interface used to set up the facility. These content and graphical tools are also used to educate regulatory approval and permitting officials and build a first-responder training guide.
Estimation of an Allowable Hydrogen Permeation Rate From Road Vehicle Compressed Gaseous Hydrogen Storage Systems In Typical Garages- Part 3
Sep 2009
Publication
The formation of a flammable hydrogen-air mixture is a major safety concern especially for closed space. This hazardous situation can arise when considering permeation from a car equipped with a composite compressed hydrogen tank with a non-metallic liner in a closed garage. In the following paper a scenario is developed and analysed with a simplified approach and a numerical simulation in order to estimate the evolution of hydrogen concentration. The system is composed of typical size garage and hydrogen car’s tank. Some parameters increasing permeation rate (i.e. tank’s material thickness and pressure) have been chosen to have a conservative approach. A close look on the top of tank surface showed that the concentration grows as square root of time and does not exceed 8.2×10-3 % by volume. Also a simplified comparative analysis estimated that the buoyancy of hydrogen-air mixture prevails on the diffusion 35 seconds after permeation starts in good agreement with simulation where time is at about 80 seconds. Finally the numerical simulations demonstrated that across the garage height the hydrogen is nearly distributed linearly and the difference in hydrogen concentration at the ceiling and floor is negligible (i.e. 3×10-3 %).
Potential Models For Stand-Alone And Multi-Fuel Gaseous Hydrogen Refuelling Stations- Assessment Of Associated Risk
Sep 2005
Publication
Air pollution and traffic congestion are two of the major issues affecting public authorities policy makers and citizens not only in Italy and European Union but worldwide; this is nowadays witnessed by always more frequent limitations to the traffic in most of Italian cities for instance. Hydrogen use in automotive appears to offer a viable solution in medium-long term; this new perspective involves the need to carry out adequate infrastructures for distribution and refuelling and consequently the need to improve knowledge on hydrogen technologies from a safety point of view. In the present work possible different configurations for gaseous hydrogen refuelling station has been compared: “stand-alone” and “multi-fuel”. These two alternative scenarios has been taken into consideration each of one with specific hypotheses: “stand-alone” configuration based on the hypothesis of a potential model consisting of a hydrogen refuelling station composed by on-site hydrogen production via electrolysis a trailer of compressed gas for back-up compressor unit intermediate storage unit and dispenser. In this model it is assumed that no other refuelling equipment and/or dispenser of traditional fuel is present in the same site. “multi-fuel” configuration where it is assumed that the same components for hydrogen refuelling station are placed in the same site beside one or more refuelling equipment and/or dispenser of traditional fuel. Comparisons have been carried out from the point of view of specific risk assessment which have been conducted on both the two alternative scenarios.
Incident Reporting- Learning from Experience
Sep 2007
Publication
Experience makes a superior teacher. Sharing the details surrounding safety events is one of the best ways to help prevent their recurrence elsewhere. This approach requires an open non-punitive environment to achieve broad benefits. The Hydrogen Incident Reporting Tool (www.h2incidents.org) is intended to facilitate the sharing of lessons learned and other relevant information gained from actual experiences using and working with hydrogen and hydrogen systems. Its intended audience includes those involved in virtually any aspect of hydrogen technology systems and use with an emphasis towards energy and transportation applications. The database contains records of safety events both publicly available and/or voluntarily submitted. Typical records contain a general description of the occurrence contributing factors equipment involved and some detailing of consequences and changes that have been subsequently implemented to prevent recurrence of similar events in the future. The voluntary and confidential nature and other characteristics surrounding the database mean that any analysis of apparent trends in its contents cannot be considered statistically valid for a universal population. A large portion of reported incidents have occurred in a laboratory setting due to the typical background of the reporting projects for example. Yet some interesting trends are becoming apparent even at this early stage of the database’s existence and general lessons can already be taken away from these experiences. This paper discusses the database and a few trends that have already become apparent for the reported incidents. Anticipated future uses of this information are also described. This paper is intended to encourage wider participation and usage of the incidents reporting database and to promote the safety benefits offered by its contents.
Ignition Limits For Combustion of Unintended Hydrogen Releases- Experimental and Theoretical Results
Sep 2009
Publication
The ignition limits of hydrogen/air mixtures in turbulent jets are necessary to establish safety distances based on ignitable hydrogen location for safety codes and standards development. Studies in turbulent natural gas jets have shown that the mean fuel concentration is insufficient to determine the flammable boundaries of the jet. Instead integration of probability density functions (PDFs) of local fuel concentration within the quiescent flammability limits termed the flammability factor (FF) was shown to provide a better representation of ignition probability (PI). Recent studies in turbulent hydrogen jets showed that the envelope of ignitable gas composition (based on the mean hydrogen concentration) did not correspond to the known flammability limits for quiescent hydrogen/air mixtures. The objective of this investigation is to validate the FF approach to the prediction of ignition in hydrogen leak scenarios. The PI within a turbulent hydrogen jet was determined using a pulsed Nd:YAG laser as the ignition source. Laser Rayleigh scattering was used to characterize the fuel concentration throughout the jet. Measurements in methane and hydrogen jets exhibit similar trends in the ignition contour which broadens radially until an axial location is reached after which the contour moves inward to the centerline. Measurements of the mean and fluctuating hydrogen concentration are used to characterize the local composition statistics conditional on whether the laser spark results in a local ignition event or complete light-up of a stable jet flame. The FF is obtained through direct integration of local PDFs. A model was developed to predict the FF using a presumed PDF with parameters obtained from experimental data and computer simulations. Intermittency effects that are important in the shear layer are incorporated in a composite PDF. By comparing the computed FF with the measured PI we have validated the flammability factor approach for application to ignition of hydrogen jets.
Experimental Study of Jet-formed Hydrogen-air Mixtures and Pressure Loads from their Deflagrations in Low Confined Surroundings
Sep 2007
Publication
To provide more practical data for safety assessments a systematic study of explosion and combustion processes which can take place in mixtures produced by jet releases in realistic environmental conditions is required. The presented work is aimed to make step forward in this direction binding three inter-connected tasks: (i) study of horizontal and vertical jets (ii) study of the burnable clouds formed by jets in different geometry configurations and (iii) examination of combustion and explosion processes initiated in such mixtures. Test matrix for the jet experiments included variation of the release pressure and nozzle diameter with the aim to study details of the resulting hydrogen concentration and velocity profiles depending on the release conditions. In this study the following parameters were varied: mass flow rate jet nozzle diameter (to alter gas speed) and geometry of the hood located on top of the jet. The carried out experiments provided data on detailed structure for under-expanded horizontal and buoyant vertical jets and data on pressure loads resulted from deflagration of various mixtures formed by jet releases. The data on pressures waves generated in the conditions under consideration provides conservative estimation of pressure loads for realistic leaks.
Agent-Based as an Alternative to Prognostic Modelling of Safety Risks in Hydrogen Energy Scenarios
Sep 2005
Publication
Interest in the future is not new. Economic constraints and acceptability considerations of today compel decision-makers from industry and authorities to speculate on possible safety risks originating from a hydrogen economy developed in the future. Tools that support thinking about the long-term consequences of today's actions and resulting technical systems are usually prognostic based on data from past performance of past or current systems. It has become convention to assume that the performance of future systems in future environments can be accommodated in the uncertainties of such prognostic models resulting from sensitivity studies. This paper presents an alternative approach to modelling future systems based on narratives about the future. Such narratives based on the actions and interactions of individual "agents" are powerful means for addressing anxiety about engaging the imagination in order to prepare for events that are likely to occur detect critical conditions and to thus achieve desirable outcomes. This is the methodological base of Agent-Based Models (ABM) and this paper will present the approach discuss its strengths and weaknesses and present a preliminary application to modelling safety risks related to energy scenarios in a possible future hydrogen economy.
Experimental Characterization and Modelling of Helium Dispersion in a ¼ - Scale Two-Car Residential Garage
Sep 2009
Publication
A series of experiments are described in which helium was released at a constant rate into a 1.5 m × 1.5 m × 0.75 m enclosure designed as a ¼-scale model of a two car garage. The purpose was to provide reference data sets for testing and validating computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models and to experimentally characterize the effects of a number of variables on the mixing behaviour within an enclosure and the exchange of helium with the surroundings. Helium was used as a surrogate for hydrogen and the total volume released was scaled as the amount that would be released by a typical hydrogen fuelled automobile with a full tank. Temporal profiles of helium were measured at seven vertical locations within the enclosure during and following one hour and four hour releases. Idealized vents in one wall sized to provide air exchange rates typical of actual garages were used. The effects of vent size number and location were investigated using three different vent combinations. The dependence on leak location was considered by releasing helium from three different points within the enclosure. It is shown that the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) CFD code Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) provides time resolved predictions for helium concentrations that agree well with the experimental measurements.
Methodology of CFD Safety Analysis for Large-Scale Industrial Structures
Sep 2005
Publication
The current work is devoted to problems connected with application of CFD tools for safety analysis of large-scale industrial structures. With the aim to preserve conservatism of overall process of multistage procedure of such analysis special efforts are required. A strategy which has to lead to obtaining of reliable results in CFD analysis is discussed. Different aspects of proposed strategy including: adequate choice of physical and numerical models procedure of validation simulations and problem of ‘under-resolved’ simulations are considered. For physical phenomena which could cause significant uncertainties in the course of scenario simulation an approach which complements CFD simulations by application of auxiliary criteria is presented. Physical basis and applicability of strong flame acceleration and detonation-to-deflagration transition criteria are discussed. In concluding part two examples of application of presented approach for nuclear power plant and workshop cell for hydrogen driven vehicles are presented.
Role of Chemical Kinetics on the Detonation Properties of Hydrogen, Natural Gas & Air Mixtures
Sep 2005
Publication
The first part of the present work is to validate a detailed kinetic mechanism for the oxidation of hydrogen – methane – air mixtures in a detonation waves. A series of experiments on auto-ignition delay times have been performed by shock tube technique coupled with emission spectrometry for H2 / CH4 / O2 mixtures highly diluted in argon. The CH4/H2 ratio was varied from 0 to 4 and the equivalence ratio from 0.4 up to 1. The temperature range was from 1250 K to 2000 K and the pressure behind reflected shock waves was between 0.15 and 1.6 MPa. A correlation was proposed between temperature (K) concentration of chemical species (mol m-3) and ignition delay times. The experimental auto-ignition delay times were compared to the modelled ones using four different mechanisms from the literature: GRI [22] Marinov et al. [23] Hughes et al. [24] Konnov [25]. A large discrepancy was generally found between the different models. The Konnov’s model that predicted auto-ignition delay times close to the measured ones has been selected to calculate the ignition delay time in the detonation waves. The second part of the study concerned the experimental determination of the detonation properties namely the detonation velocity and the cell size. The effect of the initial composition hydrogen to methane ratio and the amount of oxygen in the mixture as well as the initial pressure on the detonation velocity and on the cell size were investigated. The ratio of methane / (methane + hydrogen) varied between 0 and 0.6 for 2 different equivalence ratio (0.75 and 1) while the initial pressure was fixed to 10 kPa. A correlation was established between the characteristic cell size and the ignition delay time behind the leading shock of the detonation. It was clearly showed that methane has an important inhibitor effect on the detonation of these combustible mixtures.
Large-Scale Hydrogen Deflagrations and Detonations
Sep 2005
Publication
Large-scale deflagration and detonation experiments of hydrogen and air mixtures provide fundamental data needed to address accident scenarios and to help in the evaluation and validation of numerical models. Several different experiments of this type were performed. Measurements included flame front time of arrival (TOA) using ionization probes blast pressure heat flux high-speed video standard video and infrared video. The large-scale open-space tests used a hemispherical 300-m3 facility that confined the mixture within a thin plastic tent that was cut prior to initiating a deflagration. Initial homogeneous hydrogen concentrations varied from 15% to 30%. An array of large cylindrical obstacles was placed within the mixture for some experiments to explore turbulent enhancement of the combustion. All tests were ignited at the bottom center of the facility using either a spark or in one case a small quantity of high explosive to generate a detonation. Spark-initiated deflagration tests were performed within the tunnel using homogeneous hydrogen mixtures. Several experiments were performed in which 0.1 kg and 2.2 kg of hydrogen were released into the tunnel with and without ventilation. For some tunnel tests obstacles representing vehicles were used to investigate turbulent enhancement. A test was performed to investigate any enhancement of the deflagration due to partial confinement produced by a narrow gap between aluminium plates. The attenuation of a blast wave was investigated using a 4-m-tall protective blast wall. Finally a large-scale hydrogen jet experiment was performed in which 27 kg of hydrogen was released vertically into the open atmosphere in a period of about 30 seconds. The hydrogen plume spontaneously ignited early in the release.
Development of Tools for Risk Assessment and Risk Communication for Hydrogen Applications
Sep 2005
Publication
For decades risk assessment has been an important tool in risk management of activities in several industries world wide. It provides among others authorities and stakeholders with a sound basis for creating awareness about existing and potential hazards and risks and making decisions related to how they can prioritise and plan expenditures on risk reduction. The overall goal of the ongoing HySafe project is to contribute to the safe transition to a more sustainable development in Europe by facilitating the safe introduction of hydrogen technologies and applications. An essential element in this is the demonstration of safety: that all safety aspects related to production transportation and public use are controlled to avoid that introducing hydrogen as energy carrier should pose unacceptable risk to the society.<br/>History has proven that introducing risk analysis to new industries is beneficial e.g. in transportation and power production and distribution. However this will require existing methods and standards to be adapted to the specific applications. Furthermore when trying to quantify risk it is of utmost importance to have access to relevant accident and incident information. Such data may in many cases not be readily available and the utilisation of them will then require specific and long lasting data collection initiatives.<br/>In this paper we will present the work that has been undertaken in the HySafe project in developing methodologies and collecting data for risk management of hydrogen infrastructure. Focus is laid on the development of risk acceptance criteria and on the demonstration of safety and benefits to the public. A trustworthy demonstration of safety will have to be based on facts especially on facts widely known and emphasis will thus be put on the efforts taken to establish and operate a database containing hydrogen accident and incident information which can be utilised in risk assessment of hydrogen applications. A demonstration of safety will also have to include a demonstration of risk control measures and the paper will also present work carried out on safety distances and ignition source control.
Numerical Simulation of Large Scale Hydrogen Detonation
Sep 2009
Publication
The present work is concerned with numerical simulations of large scale hydrogen detonations. Euler equations have been solved along with a single step reaction for the chemistry. Total variation diminishing (TVD) numerical schemes are used for shock capturing. The equations are solved in parallel in a decomposed domain. Predictions were firstly conducted with a small domain to ensure that the reaction scheme has been properly tuned to capture the correct detonation pressure and velocity. On this basis simulations were set up for the detonation tests carried out at the RUT tunnel facilities in Russia. This is one of the standard benchmark test cases selected for HYSAFE [1]. Comparison is made between the predictions and measurements. Reasonably good agreement has been obtained on pressure decay and the propagation speed of detonation. Further simulations were then conducted for a hypothetical hydrogen-air cloud in the open to assess the impulse as well as overpressure. The effects of cloud height width were investigated in the safety context.
CFD Modelling of Accidental Hydrogen Release from Pipelines
Sep 2005
Publication
Although today hydrogen is distributed mainly by trailers in the long terms pipeline distribution will be more suitable if large amounts of hydrogen are produced on industrial scale. Therefore from the safety point of view it is essential to compare hydrogen pipelines to natural gas pipelines which are well established today. Within the paper we compare safety implications in accidental situations. We do not look into technological aspects such as compressors or seals.<br/>Using a CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) tool it is possible to investigate the effects of different properties (density diffusivity viscosity and flammability limits) of hydrogen and methane on the dispersion process. In addition CFD tools allow studying the influence of different release scenarios geometrical configurations and atmospheric conditions. An accidental release from a pipeline is modelled. The release is simulated as a flow though a small hole between the high-pressure pipeline and the environment. A part of the pipeline is included in the simulations as high-pressure reservoir. Due to the large pressure difference between the pipeline and the environment the flow conditions at the release become critical.<br/>For the assumed scenarios larger amount of flammable mixture could be observed in case of hydrogen release. On the other hand because of buoyancy and a higher sonic speed at the release the hydrogen clouds are farther from the ground level or buildings than in case of the methane clouds decreasing the probability of ignition and reducing the flame acceleration due to obstacles in case of ignition. Results on the effect of wind in the release scenarios are also described.
Sensitivity to Detonation and Detonation Cellular Structure of H2-O2-AIr-H2O2 Gas Mixtures
Sep 2005
Publication
Today it is not known – neither qualitatively not quantitatively - how large the impact can be of the promoters on sensitivity to hydrogen-air detonation in hypothetical accidents at hydrogen-containing installations transport or storage facilities. Report goal is to estimate theoretically an effect of hydrogen-peroxide (as representative promoter) on sensitivity to detonation of the stoichiometric hydrogen-oxygen gas mixtures. The classical H2-O2-Ar (2:1:7) gas mixture was chosen as reference system with the well established and unambiguously interpreted experimental data. In kinetic simulations it was found that the ignition delay time is sensitive to H2O2addition for small initial H2O2concentrations and is nearly constant for the large ones. Parametric reactive CFD studies of two dimensional cellular structure of 2H2-O2-7Ar-H2O2 detonations with variable hydrogen peroxide concentration (up to 10 vol.%) were also performed. Two un-expected results were obtained. First result: detonation cell size is practically independent upon variation of initial hydrogen peroxide concentration. For practical applications it means that presence of hydrogen-peroxide did not change drastically sensitivity of the stoichiometric hydrogen-oxygen gas mixtures. These theoretical speculations require an experimental verification. Second result: for large enough initial H2O2concentrations (> 1 vol.% at least) a new element of cellular structure of steady detonation wave was revealed. It is a system of multiple secondary longitudinal shock waves (SLSW) which propagates in the direction opposite to that of the leading shock wave. Detailed mechanism of SLSW formation is proposed.
Hydrogen Transport Safety: Case of Compressed Gaseous Tube Trailer
Sep 2005
Publication
The following paper describes researches to evaluate the behaviour under various accidental conditions of systems of transport compressed hydrogen. Particularly have been considered gaseous tube trailer and the packages cylinders employed for the road transport which have an internal gas pressures up to 200 barg.<br/>Further to a verification of the actual safety conditions this analysis intends to propose a theme that in the next future if confirmed projects around the employment of hydrogen as possible source energetic alternative could become quite important. The general increase of the consumptions of hydrogen and the consequently probable increase of the transports of gaseous hydrogen in pressure they will make the problem of the safety of the gaseous tube trail particularly important. Gaseous tube trailers will also use as components of plant. for versatility easy availability' and inexpensiveness.<br/>The first part of the memory is related to the analysis of the accidents happened in the last year in Italy with compressed hydrogen transports and particularly an accurate study has been made on the behaviour of a gaseous tube trailer involved in fire following a motorway accident in March 2003. In the central part of the job has been done a safety analysis of the described events trying to make to also emerge the most critical elements towards the activities developed by the teams of help intervened.<br/>Finally in the last part you are been listed on the base of the picked data a series of proposals and indications of the possible structural and procedural changes that could be suggested with the purpose to guarantee more elevated safety levels.
Numerical Investigation of Hydrogen Release from Varying Diameter Exit
Sep 2011
Publication
Computational fluid dynamics is used to simulate the release of high pressure Hydrogen from a reservoir with an exit of increasing diameter. Abel-Noble real gas equation of state is used to accurately simulate this high pressure release. Parallel processing based on Message Passing Interface for domain decomposition is employed to decrease the solution time. The release exit boundary is increased in time to simulate a scenario when the exit area increases during the release. All nodes and elements are moved accordingly at each time step to maintain the quality of the mesh. Different speeds of increasing diameter are investigated to see the impact on this unsteady flow.
HySafe European Network of Excellence on Hydrogen Safety
Sep 2005
Publication
Introduction and commercialisation of hydrogen as an energy carrier of the future make great demands on all aspects of safety. Safety is a critical issue for innovations as it influences the economic attractiveness and public acceptance of any new idea or product. However research and safety expertise related to hydrogen is quite fragmented in Europe. The vision of a significant increased use of hydrogen as an energy carrier in Europe could not go ahead without strengthening and merging this expertise. This was the reason for the European Commission to support the launch on the first of March 2004 of a so-called Network of Excellence (NoE) on hydrogen safety: HySafe.
Guidelines for Fire Corps Standard Operating Procedures in the Event of Hydrogen Releases
Sep 2007
Publication
This paper presents a study on the Standard Operating Procedures (P.O.S.s) for the operation of the Fire Corps squads in the event of accidents with a hydrogen release fire or explosion. This study has been carried out by the Italian Working Group on the fire prevention safety issues as one of its main objectives. The Standard Operating Procedures proved to be a basic tool in order to improve the effectiveness of the Fire Corps rescue activity. The unique physical and chemical properties of the hydrogen its use without odorization and its almost invisible flame require a review of the already codified approaches to the rescue operations where conventional gases are involved. However this is only the first step; a Standard Operating Procedure puts together both the theoretical and practical experience achieved on the management of the rescue operations; therefore its arrangement is a cyclic process by nature always under continuous revision updating and improvement.
On Numerical Simulation of Liquefied and Gaseous Hydrogen Releases at Large Scales
Sep 2005
Publication
The large eddy simulation (LES) model developed at the University of Ulster has been applied to simulate releases of 5.11 m3 liquefied hydrogen (LH2) in open atmosphere and gaseous hydrogen (GH2) in 20-m3 closed vessel. The simulations of a spill of liquefied hydrogen confirmed the advantage of LES application to reproduce experimentally observed eddy structure of hydrogen-air cloud. The inclination angle of simulated cloud is close to experimentally reported 300. The processes of two phase hydrogen release and heat transfer were simplified by inflow of gaseous hydrogen with temperature 20 K equal to boiling point. It is shown that difference in inflow conditions geometry and grid resolution affects simulation results. It is suggested that phenomenon of air condensationevaporation in the cloud in temperature range 20-90 K should be accounted for in future. The simulations reproduced well experimental data on GH2 release and transport in 20-m3 vessel during 250 min including a phenomenon of hydrogen concentration growth at the bottom of the vessel. Higher experimental hydrogen concentration at the bottom is assumed to be due to non-uniformity of temperature of vessel walls generating additional convection. The comparison of convective and diffusion terms in Navie-Stokes equations has revealed that a value of convective term is more than order of magnitude prevail over a value of turbulent diffusion term. It is assumed that the hydrogen transport to the bottom of the vessel is driven by the remaining chaotic flow velocities superimposed on stratified hydrogen concentration field. Further experiments and simulations with higher accuracy have to be performed to confirm this phenomenon. It has been demonstrated that hydrogen-air mixture became stratified in about 1 min after release was completed. However one-dimensional models are seen not capable to reproduce slow transport of hydrogen during long period of time characteristic for scenarios such as leakage in a garage.
Validation of CFD Calculations Against Ignited Impinging Jet Experiments
Sep 2007
Publication
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) tools have been increasingly employed for carrying out quantitative risk assessment (QRA) calculations in the process industry. However these tools must be validated against representative experimental data in order to have a real predictive capability. As any typical accident scenario is quite complex it is important that the CFD tool is able to predict combined release and ignition scenarios reasonably well. However this kind of validation is not performed frequently primarily due to absence of good quality data. For that reason the recent experiments performed by FZK under the HySafe internal project InsHyde (http://www.hysafe.org) are important. These involved vertically upwards hydrogen releases with different release rates and velocities impinging on a plate in two different geometrical configurations. The dispersed cloud was subsequently ignited and pressures recorded. These experiments are important not only for corroborating the underlying physics of any large-scale safety study but also for validating the important assumptions used in QRA. Blind CFD simulations of the release and ignition scenarios were carried out prior to the experiments to predict the results (and possibly assist in planning) of the experiments. The simulated dispersion results are found to correlate reasonably well with experimental data in terms of the gas concentrations. The overpressures subsequent to ignition obtained in the blind predictions could not be compared directly with the experiments as the ignition points were somewhat different but the pressure levels were found to be similar. Simulations carried out after the experiments with the same ignition position as those in the experiments compared reasonably well with the measurements in terms of the pressure level. This agreement points to the ability of the CFD tool FLACS to model such complex scenarios well. Nevertheless the experimental set-up can be considered to be small-scale and less severe than many accidents and real-life situations. Future large-scale data of this type will be valuable to confirm ability to predict large-scale accident scenarios.
Optimization of a Solar Hydrogen Storage System: Safety Considerations
Sep 2007
Publication
Hydrogen has been extensively used in many industrial applications for more than 100 years including production storage transport delivery and final use. Nevertheless the goal of the hydrogen energy system implies the use of hydrogen as an energy carrier in a more wide scale and for a public not familiarised with hydrogen technologies and properties.<br/>The road to the hydrogen economy passes by the development of safe practices in the production storage distribution and use of hydrogen. These issues are essential for hydrogen insurability. We have to bear in mind that a catastrophic failure in any hydrogen project could damage the insurance public perception of hydrogen technologies at this early step of development of hydrogen infrastructures.<br/>Safety is a key issue for the development of hydrogen economy and a great international effort is being done by different stakeholders for the development of suitable codes and standards concerning safety for hydrogen technologies [1 2]. Additionally to codes and standards different studies have been done regarding safety aspects of particular hydrogen energy projects during the last years [3 4]. Most of such have been focused on hydrogen production and storage in large facilities transport delivery in hydrogen refuelling stations and utilization mainly on fuel cells for mobile and stationary applications. In comparison safety considerations for hydrogen storage in small or medium scale facilities as usual in hydrogen production plants from renewable energies have received relatively less attention.<br/>After a brief introduction to risk assessment for hydrogen facilities this paper reports an example of risk assessment of a small solar hydrogen storage system applied to the INTA Solar Hydrogen Production and Storage facility as particular case and considers a top level Preliminary Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA) for the identification of hazard associated to the specific characteristics of the facility.
Stress Corrosion Cracking Of Stainless Steels In High Pressure Alkaline Electrolysers
Sep 2005
Publication
Hydrogen-producing high-pressure electrolysers operating with 40% potassium hydroxide solution and an applied oxygen pressure up to 30 barg have been developed. Austenitic stainless steels of type AISI316L are deemed resistant to stress corrosion cracking (SCC) in concentrated KOH solutions. However SCC has on some occasions been observed on the oxygen side of the high-pressure electrolysers thereby representing a safety risk in the operation. Several materials have been tested for resistance to SCC using C-ring specimens in autoclaves under conditions similar to the high-pressure electrolysers and at temperatures up to 120°C. The tests confirmed the observed susceptibility of austenitic stainless steels to SCC in concentrated KOH solutions. Higher alloyed austenitic stainless steels also showed SCC. Duplex stainless steel and nickel based Alloy 28 showed good resistance to SCC in the given environment. Further tests are needed to define the optimum weld procedure.
Numerical Simulation of Hydrogen Explosion Tests with a Barrier Wall for Blast Mitigation
Sep 2005
Publication
We have investigated hydrogen explosion risk and its mitigation focusing on compact hydrogen refuelling stations in urban areas. In this study numerical analyses were performed of hydrogen blast propagation and the structural behaviour of barrier walls. Parametric numerical simulations of explosions were carried out to discover effective shapes for blast-mitigating barrier walls. The explosive source was a prismatic 5.27 m3 volume that contained 30% hydrogen and 70% air. A reinforced concrete wall 2 m tall by 10 m wide and 0.15 m thick was set 2 or 4 m away from the front surface of the source. The source was ignited at the bottom centre by a spark for the deflagration case and 10 g of C-4 high explosive for two detonation cases. Each of the tests measured overpressures on the surfaces of the wall and on the ground displacements of the wall and strains of the rebar inside the wall. The blast simulations were carried out with an in-house CFD code based on the compressive Euler equation. The initial energy estimated from the volume of hydrogen was a time-dependent function for the deflagration and was released instantaneously for the detonations. The simulated overpressures were in good agreement with test results for all three test cases. DIANA a finite element analysis code released by TNO was used for the structural simulations of the barrier wall. The overpressures obtained by the blast simulations were used as external forces. The analyses simulated the displacements well but not the rebar strains. The many shrinkage cracks that were observed on the walls some of which penetrated the wall could make it difficult to simulate the local behaviour of a wall with high accuracy and could cause strain gages to provide low-accuracy data. A parametric study of the blast simulation was conducted with several cross-sectional shapes of barrier wall. A T-shape and a Y-shape were found to be more effective in mitigating the blast.
A Survey Among Experts of Safety Related to the Use of Hydrogen as an Energy Carrier
Sep 2005
Publication
Based on the increasing need of energy for the future and the related risks to the environments due to burning of fossils fuels hydrogen is seen as an efficient and application related clean energy carrier that may be derived from renewable energy sources. A variety of applications connected with production and use of hydrogen and the related risks have been identified and a survey has been conducted among a number of experts as an internet exercise for unveiling the potential lack of necessary knowledge in order to handle hydrogen in a safe way concerning the various applications. The main results concern hazardous situations related to release and explosions of hydrogen in confined and semi-confined areas tunnels and garages and mitigation of hazardous situations i.e. preventions of accidents and reduction of consequences from accidents happening anyway.
Fire Prevention Technical Rule for Gaseous Hydrogen Refuelling Stations
Sep 2005
Publication
In the last years different Italian hydrogen projects provided for gaseous hydrogen motor vehicles refuelling stations. Motivated by the lack of suitable set of rules in the year 2002 Italian National Firecorps (Institute under the Italian Ministry of the Interior) formed an Ad Hoc Working Group asked to regulate the above-said stations as regards fire prevention and protection safety. This Working Group consists of members coming from both Firecorps and academic world (Pisa University). Throughout his work this Group produced a technical rule covering the fire prevention requirements for design construction and operation of gaseous hydrogen refuelling stations. This document has been approved by the Ministry’s Technical Scientific Central Committee for fire prevention (C.C.T.S.) and now it has to carry out the “Community procedure for the provision of information”. This paper describes the main safety contents of the technical rule.
Massive H2 Production With Nuclear Heating, Safety Approach For Coupling A VHTR With An Iodine Sulfur Process Cycle
Sep 2005
Publication
In the frame of a sustainable development investigations dealing with massive Hydrogen production by means of nuclear heating are carried out at CEA. For nuclear safety thermodynamic efficiency and waste minimization purposes the technological solution privileged is the coupling of a gas cooled Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) with a plant producing Hydrogen from an Iodine/Sulfur (I/S) thermochemical cycle. Each of the aforementioned facilities presents different risks resulting from the operation of a nuclear reactor (VHTR) and from a chemical plant including Hydrogen other flammable and/or explosible substances as well as toxic ones. Due to these various risks the safety approach is an important concern. Therefore this paper deals with the preliminary CEA investigations on the safety issues devoted to the whole plant focusing on the safety questions related to the coupling between the nuclear reactor and the Hydrogen production facility. Actually the H2 production process and the energy distribution network between the plants are currently at a preliminary design stage. A general safety approach is proposed based on a Defence In Depth (DID) principle permitting to analyze all the system configurations successively in normal incidental and accidental expected operating conditions. More precisely the dynamic answer of an installation to a perturbation affecting the other one during the previous conditions as well as the potential aggressions of the chemical plant towards the nuclear reactor have to be considered. The methodology presented in this paper is intended to help the designer to take into account the coupling safety constraints and to provide some recommendations on the global architecture of both plants especially on their coupling system. As a result the design of a VHTR combined to a H2 production process will require an iterative process between design and safety requirements.
Risk Assessment for Hydrogen Codes and Standards
Sep 2005
Publication
The development and promulgation of codes and standards are essential to establish a market-receptive environment for commercial hydrogen-based products and systems. The focus of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is to conduct the research and development (R&D) needed to strengthen the scientific basis for technical requirements incorporated in national and international standards codes and regulations. In the U.S. the DOE and its industry partners have formed a Codes and Standards Tech Team (CSTT) to help guide the R&D. The CSTT has adopted an R&D Roadmap to achieve a substantial and verified database of the properties and behaviour of hydrogen and the performance characteristics of emerging hydrogen technology applications sufficient to enable the development of effective codes and standards for these applications. However to develop a more structured approach to the R&D described above the CSTT conducted a workshop on Risk Assessment for Hydrogen Codes and Standards in March 2005. The purpose of the workshop was to attain a consensus among invited experts on the protocols and data needed to address the development of risk-informed standards codes and regulations for hydrogen used as an energy carrier by consumers. Participants at the workshop identified and assessed requirements methodologies and applicability of risk assessment (RA) tools to develop a framework to conduct RA activities to address for example hydrogen fuel distribution delivery on-site storage and dispensing and hydrogen vehicle servicing and parking. The CSTT was particularly interested in obtaining the advice of RA experts and representatives of standards and model code developing organizations and industry on how data generated by R&D can be turned into information that is suitable for hydrogen codes and standards development. The paper reports on the results of the workshop and the RA activities that the DOE’s program on hydrogen safety codes and standards will undertake. These RA activities will help structure a comprehensive R&D effort that the DOE and its industry partners are undertaking to obtain the data and conduct the analysis and testing needed to establish a scientific and technical basis for hydrogen standards codes and regulations.
Testing of Hydrogen Safety Sensors in Service Simulated Conditions
Sep 2005
Publication
Reliable and effective sensors for the accurate detection of hydrogen concentrations in air are essential for the safe operation of fuel cells hydrogen fuelled systems (e.g. vehicles) and hydrogen production distribution and storage facilities. The present paper describes the activity on-going at JRC for the establishment of a facility that can be used for testing and validating the performance of hydrogen sensors under a range of conditions representative of those to be encountered in service. Potential aspects to be investigated in relation to the sensors performances are the influence of temperature humidity and pressure (simulating variations in altitude) the sensitivity to target gas and the cross sensitivity to other gases/vapours the reaction and recovery time and the sensors’ lifetime. The facility set up at JRC for the execution of these tests is described including the program for its commissioning. The results of a preliminary test are presented and discussed as an example.
Numerical Study of a Highly Under-Expanded Hydrogen Jet
Sep 2005
Publication
Numerical simulations are carried out for a highly under-expanded hydrogen jet resulting from an accidental release of high-pressure hydrogen into the atmospheric environment. The predictions are made using two independent CFD codes namely CFX and KIVA. The KIVA code has been substantially modified by the present authors to enable large eddy simulation (LES). It employs a oneequation sub-grid scale (SGS) turbulence model which solves the SGS kinetic energy equation to allow for more relaxed equilibrium requirement and to facilitate high fidelity LES calculations with relatively coarser grids. Instead of using the widely accepted pseudo-source approach the complex shock structures resulting from the high under-expansion is numerically resolved in a small computational domain above the jet exit. The computed results are used as initial conditions for the subsequent hydrogen jet simulation. The predictions provide insight into the shock structure and the subsequent jet development. Such knowledge is valuable for studying the ignition characteristics of high-pressure hydrogen jets in the safety context.
Compatibility of Metallic Materials with Hydrogen Review of the Present Knowledge
Sep 2007
Publication
In this document after a review of the accidents/incidents are described the different interactions between hydrogen gas and the most commonly used materials including the influence of "internal" and "external" hydrogen the phenomena occurring in all ranges of temperatures and pressures and Hydrogen Embrittlement (HE) created by gaseous hydrogen. The principle of all the test methods used to investigate this phenomenon are presented and discussed. The advantages and disadvantages of each method will be explained. The document also covers the influence of all the parameters related to HE including the ones related to the material itself the ones related to the design and manufacture of the equipment and the ones related to the hydrogen itself (pressure temperature purity etc). Finally recommendations to avoid repetition of accidents/incidents mentioned before are proposed.
CFD Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion Experiments for SAE J2578 Test Methods Development
Sep 2007
Publication
This paper discusses the results of validation of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modelling of hydrogen releases and dispersion inside a metal container imitating a single car garage based on experimental results. The said experiments and modelling were conducted as part of activities to predict fuel cell vehicles discharge flammability and potential build-up of hydrogen for the development of test procedures for the Recommended Practice for General Fuel Cell Vehicle Safety SAE J2578. The experimental setup included 9 hydrogen detectors located in each corner and in the middle of the roof of the container and a fan to ensure uniform mixing of the released hydrogen. The PHOENICS CFD software package was used to solve the continuity momentum and concentration equations with the appropriate boundary conditions buoyancy effect and turbulence models. Obtained modelling results matched experimental data of a high-rate injection of hydrogen with fan-forced dispersion used to create near-uniform mixtures with a high degree of accuracy. This supports the conclusion that CFD modelling will be able to predict potential accumulation of hydrogen beyond the experimental conditions. CFD modelling of hydrogen concentrations has proven to be reliable effective and relatively inexpensive tool to evaluate the effects of hydrogen discharge from hydrogen powered vehicles or other hydrogen containing equipment.
The Safe Use of the Existing Natural Gas System for Hydrogen (Overview of the NATURALHY-Project)
Sep 2005
Publication
The transition period towards the situation in which hydrogen will become an important energy carrier will be lengthy (decades) costly and needs a significant R&D effort. It’s clear therefore that the development of a hydrogen system requires a practical strategy within the context of the existing assets. Examining the potential of the existing extensive natural gas chain (transmission - distribution - end user infrastructures and appliances) is a logical first step towards the widespread delivery of hydrogen.
The project will define the conditions under which hydrogen can be mixed with natural gas for delivery by the existing natural gas system and later withdrawn selectively from the pipeline system by advanced separation technologies. Membranes will be developed to enable this separation. The socio-economic and life cycle consequences of this hydrogen delivery approach will be mapped out. By adding hydrogen to natural gas the physical and chemical properties of the mixture will differ from “pure” natural gas. As this may have a major effect on safety issues and durability issues (which also have a safety component) related to the gas delivery and the performance of end use appliances these issues are particularly addressed in the project.
The project is executed by a European consortium of 39 partners (including 15 from the gas industry). In this project set up under the auspices of GERG The European Gas Research Group there are leading roles for N.V. Nederlandse Gasunie (NL) Gaz de France (F) TNO (NL) ISQ (P) the Universities of Loughborough and Warwick (UK) and Exergia (GR). Guidance will be provided by a Strategic Advisory Committee consisting of representatives from relevant (inter)national organizations.
The project started on 1st May 2004 and will run for 5 years. The European Commission has selected the Integrated Project NATURALHY for financial support within the Sixth Framework Programme.
The project will define the conditions under which hydrogen can be mixed with natural gas for delivery by the existing natural gas system and later withdrawn selectively from the pipeline system by advanced separation technologies. Membranes will be developed to enable this separation. The socio-economic and life cycle consequences of this hydrogen delivery approach will be mapped out. By adding hydrogen to natural gas the physical and chemical properties of the mixture will differ from “pure” natural gas. As this may have a major effect on safety issues and durability issues (which also have a safety component) related to the gas delivery and the performance of end use appliances these issues are particularly addressed in the project.
The project is executed by a European consortium of 39 partners (including 15 from the gas industry). In this project set up under the auspices of GERG The European Gas Research Group there are leading roles for N.V. Nederlandse Gasunie (NL) Gaz de France (F) TNO (NL) ISQ (P) the Universities of Loughborough and Warwick (UK) and Exergia (GR). Guidance will be provided by a Strategic Advisory Committee consisting of representatives from relevant (inter)national organizations.
The project started on 1st May 2004 and will run for 5 years. The European Commission has selected the Integrated Project NATURALHY for financial support within the Sixth Framework Programme.
Analysis of Buoyancy-driven Ventilation of Hydrogen from Buildings
Sep 2007
Publication
When hydrogen gas is used or stored within a building as with a hydrogen-powered vehicle parked in a residential garage any leakage of unignited H2 will mix with indoor air and may form a flammable mixture. One approach to safety engineering relies on buoyancy-driven passive ventilation of H2 from the building through vents to the outside. To discover relationships between design variables we combine two types of analysis: (1) a simplified 1-D steady-state analysis of buoyancy-driven ventilation and (2) CFD modelling using FLUENT 6.3. The simplified model yields a closed-form expression relating the H2 concentration to vent area height and discharge coefficient; leakage rate; and a stratification factor. The CFD modelling includes 3-D geometry; H2 cloud formation; diffusion momentum convection and thermal effects; and transient response. We modelled a typical residential two-car garage with 5 kg of H2 stored in a fuel tank; leakage rates of 5.9 to 82 L/min (tank discharge times of 12 hours to 1 week); a variety of vent sizes and heights; and both isothermal and nonisothermal conditions. This modelling indicates a range of the stratification factor needed to apply the simplified model for vent sizing as well as a more complete understanding of the dynamics of H2 movement within the building. A significant thermal effect occurs when outdoor temperature is higher than indoor temperature so that thermocirculation opposes the buoyancy-driven ventilation of H2. This circumstance leads to higher concentrations of H2 in the building relative to an isothermal case. In an unconditioned space such as a residential garage this effect depends on the thermal coupling of indoor air to outdoor air the ground (under a concrete slab floor) and an adjacent conditioned space in addition to temperatures. We use CFD modelling to explore the magnitude of this effect under rather extreme conditions.
Collaborative Activities On Hydrogen Safety under the International Energy Agency’s Hydrogen Implementing
Sep 2005
Publication
In October 2004 the International Energy Agency Hydrogen Implementing Agreement (www.ieahia.org) approved the initiation of a collaborative task on hydrogen safety. During the past twelve months a work plan has been established and several member countries have committed to participate. Because of the nature of the International Energy Agency which is an international agreement between governments it is hoped that such collaboration will complement other cooperative efforts to help build the technology base around which codes and standards can be developed. In this way the new task on hydrogen safety will further the IEA Hydrogen Agreement in fulfilling its mission to accelerate the commercial introduction of hydrogen energy. This paper describes the specific scope and work plan for the collaboration that has been developed to date.
Compatibility of Materials with Hydrogen Particular Case- Hydrogen Assisted Stress Cracking of Titanium Alloys
Sep 2007
Publication
A review of the effect of hydrogen on materials is addressed in this paper. General aspects of the interaction of hydrogen and materials hydrogen embrittlement low temperature effects material suitability for hydrogen service and materials testing are the main subjects considered in the first part of the paper. As a particular case of the effect of hydrogen in materials the hydride formation of titanium alloys is considered. Alpha titanium alloys are considered corrosion resistant materials in a wide range of environments. However hydrogen absorption and the possible associated problems must be taken into account when considering titanium as a candidate material for high responsibility applications. The sensitivity of three different titanium alloys Ti Gr-2 Ti Gr-5 and Ti Gr-12 to the Hydrogen Assisted Stress Cracking phenomena has been studied by means of the Slow Strain Rate Technique (SSRT). The testing media has been sea water and hydrogen has been produced on the specimen surface during the test by cathodic polarization. Tested specimens have been characterized by metallography and scanning electron microscopy. Results obtained show that the microstructure of the materials particularly the β phase content plays an important role on the sensitivity of the studied alloys to the Hydrogen Assisted Stress Cracking Phenomena.
Physics of Spontaneous Ignition of High-Pressure Hydrogen Release and Transition to Jet Fire
Sep 2009
Publication
The main objective of this study is an insight into physical phenomena underlying spontaneous ignition of hydrogen at sudden release from high pressure storage and its transition into the sustained jet fire. This paper describes modelling and large eddy simulation (LES) of spontaneous ignition dynamics in a tube with a rupture disk separating high pressure hydrogen storage and the atmosphere. Numerical experiments carried out by a LES model have provided an insight into the physics of the spontaneous ignition phenomenon. It is demonstrated that a chemical reaction commences in a boundary layer within the tube and propagates throughout the tube cross-section after that. Simulated by the LES model dynamics of flame formation outside the tube has reproduced experimental observation of combustion by high-speed photography including vortex induced “flame separation". It is concluded that the model developed can be applied for hydrogen safety engineering in particular for development of innovative pressure relief devices.
Prediction of the Lift-off, Blow-out and Blow-off Stability Limits of Pure Hydrogen and Hydrogen and Hydrocarbon Mixture Jet Flames
Sep 2007
Publication
The paper presented experimental studies of the liftoff and blowout stability of pure hydrogen hydrogen/propane and hydrogen/methane jet flam es using a 2 mm burner. Carbon dioxide and Argon gas were also used in the study for the comparison with hydrocarbon fuel. Comparisons of the stability of H 2/C3H8 H 2/CH4 H 2/Ar and H 2/CO2 flames showed that H 2/C3H8 produced the highest liftoff height and H 2/CH4 required highest liftoff and blowoff velocities. The non-dimensional analysis of liftoff height approach was used to correlate liftoff data of H 2 H2-C3H8 H 2-CO2 C 3H8 and H2-Ar jet flames tested in the 2 mm burner. The suitability of extending the empirical correlations based on hydrocarbon flames to both hydrogen and hydrogen/ hydrocarbon flames was examined.
A Rural Hydrogen Transportation Test Bed
Sep 2007
Publication
The University of Missouri-Rolla (UMR) through a hydrogen internal combustion engine vehicle evaluation participation agreement with the Ford Motor Company will establish a commuter bus service and hydrogen refueling at a station in rural Missouri near Ft. Leonard Wood (FLW). Initiated by a request from the U.S. Army Maneuver Support Center at FLW UMR is leading the effort to launch the commuter service between FLW and the neighboring towns of Rolla and Lebanon Missouri each of which are located approximately 40 km from the military base on Interstate-44 highway. The broad research training and education agenda for the rural hydrogen transportation test bed is to develop demonstrate evaluate and promote safe hydrogen-based technologies in a real world environment. With funds provided by the Defense Logistics Agency through the Air Force Research Laboratory this hydrogen initiative will build and operate a hydrogen fueling facility that includes on-site generation of hydrogen through electrolysis as well as selling a range of other traditional and alternative fuels.
Safety of Hydrogen-fueled Motor Vehicles with IC Engines.
Sep 2005
Publication
Clarification of questions of safety represents a decisive contribution to the successful introduction of vehicles fuelled by hydrogen. At the moment the safety of hydrogen is being discussed and investigated by various bodies. The primary focus is on fuel-cell vehicles with hydrogen stored in gaseous form. This paper looks at the safety of hydrogen-fuelled vehicles with an internal combustion engine and liquefied hydrogen storage. The safety concept of BMW’s hydrogen vehicles is described and the specific aspects of the propulsion and storage concepts discussed. The main discussion emphasis is on the utilization of boil-off parking of the vehicles in an enclosed space and their crash behaviour. Theoretical safety observations are complemented by the latest experimental and test results. Finally reference is made to the topic-areas in the field of hydrogen safety in which cooperative research work could make a valuable contribution to the future of the hydrogen-powered vehicle.
Experimental Investigation of Hydrogen Jet Fire Mitigation by Barrier Walls
Sep 2009
Publication
Hydrogen jet flames resulting from ignition of unintended releases can be extensive in length and pose significant radiation and impingement hazards. One possible mitigation strategy to reduce exposure to jet flames is to incorporate barriers around hydrogen storage and delivery equipment. While reducing the extent of unacceptable consequences the walls may introduce other hazards if not properly configured. This paper describes experiments carried out to characterize the effectiveness of different barrier wall configurations at reducing the hazards created by jet fires. The hazards that are evaluated are the generation of overpressure during ignition the thermal radiation produced by the jet flame and the effectiveness of the wall at deflecting the flame.<br/>The tests were conducted against a vertical wall (1-wall configuration) and two “3-wall” configurations that consisted of the same vertical wall with two side walls of the same dimensions angled at 135° and 90°. The hydrogen jet impinged on the center of the central wall in all cases. In terms of reducing the radiation heat flux behind the wall the 1-wall configuration performed best followed by the 3-wall 135° configuration and the 3-wall 90°. The reduced shielding efficiency of the three-wall configurations was probably due to the additional confinement created by the side walls that limited the escape of hot gases to the sides of the wall and forced the hot gases to travel over the top of the wall.<br/>The 3-wall barrier with 135° side walls exhibited the best overall performance. Overpressures produced on the release side of the wall were similar to those produced in the 1-wall configuration. The attenuation of overpressure and impulse behind the wall was comparable to that of the three-wall configuration with 90° side walls. The 3-wall 135° configuration’s ability to shield the back side of the wall from the heat flux emitted from the jet flame was comparable to the 1-wall and better than the 3-wall 90° configuration. The ratio of peak overpressure (from in front of the wall and from behind the wall) showed that the 3-wall 135° configuration and the 3-wall 90° configuration had a similar effectiveness. In terms of the pressure mitigation the 3-wall configurations performed significantly better than the 1-wall configuration
Hydrogen–methane Mixtures: Dispersion and Stratification Studies
Sep 2011
Publication
The study of hydrogen as an alternative fuel clean and “environment friendly” has been in the last years and continues to be object of many studies international projects and standard development. Hydrogen is a fundamental energy carrier to be developed together with other renewable resources for the transition to a sustainable energy system.<br/>But experience has shown how often the introduction and establishment of a new technology does not necessarily pass through radical changes but can be stimulated by slight modifications to the “present situation”.<br/>So the worldwide experience with natural gas as industrial automotive and domestic fuel has been the incentive to the present interest towards hydrogen–methane mixtures. The possible use of existing pipeline networks for mixtures of natural gas and hydrogen offers a unique and cost-effective opportunity to initiate the progressive introduction of hydrogen as part of the development of a full hydrogen system.<br/>The aim of the work presented in this paper is the investigation of the dispersion and stratification properties of hydrogen and methane mixtures. Experimental activities have been carried out in a large scale closed apparatus characterized by a volume of about 25 m3 both with and without natural ventilation. Mixtures of 10%vol. hydrogen – 90%vol. methane and 30%vol. hydrogen – 70%vol. methane have been studied with the help of oxygen sensors and gas chromatography.
Quantification of the Uncertainty of the Peak Pressure Value in the Vented Deflagrations of Air-Hydrogen Mixtures
Sep 2007
Publication
In the problem of the protection by the consequences of an explosion is actual for many industrial application involving storage of gas like methane or hydrogen refuelling stations and so on. A simple and economic way to reduce the peak pressure associated to a deflagration is to supply to the confined environment an opportune surface substantially less resistant then the protected structure typically in stoichiometric conditions the peak pressure reduction is around the 8 bars for a generic hydrocarbon combustion in an adiabatic system lacking of whichever mitigation system. In general the problem is the forecast of the peak pressure value (PMAX) of the explosion. This problem is faced using CFD codes modelling the structure in which the explosion is located and setting the main parameters like concentration of the gas in the mixture the volume available the size of vent area and obstacles (if included) and so on. In this work the idea is to start from empirical data to train a Neural Network (NN) in order to find the correlation among the parameters regulating the phenomenon. Associated to this prediction a fuzzy model will provide to quantify the uncertainty of the predicted value.
Safety Aspects of Land-Use Planning Scenarios for a Future Infrastructure with Hydrogen Re-Fuelling Stations
Sep 2005
Publication
Hydrogen is currently gaining much attention as a possible future substitute for oil in the transport sector. Hydrogen is not a primary energy source but can be produced from other sources of energy. A future hydrogen economy will need the establishment of new infrastructures for producing storing distributing dispensing and using hydrogen. Hydrogen can be produced in large-scale centralized facilities or in smaller scale on-site systems. Large-scale production requires distribution in pipelines or trucks. A major challenge is to plan the new infrastructures to approach an even safer society regarding safe use of hydrogen. The paper will on the basis of some scenarios for hydrogen deployment highlight and evaluate safety aspects related to future hydrogen economy infrastructures.
Experimental Study of Hydrogen Release Accidents in a Vehicle Garage
Sep 2009
Publication
Storing a hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle in a garage poses a potential safety hazard because of the accidents that could arise from a hydrogen leak. A series of tests examined the risk involved with hydrogen releases and deflagrations in a structure built to simulate a one-car garage. The experiments involved igniting hydrogen gas that was released inside the structure and studying the effects of the deflagrations. The “garage” measured 2.72 m high 3.64 m wide and 6.10 m long internally and was constructed from steel using a reinforced design capable of withstanding a detonation. The front face of the garage was covered with a thin transparent plastic film. Experiments were performed to investigate extended-duration (20–40 min) hydrogen leaks. The effect that the presence of a vehicle in the garage has on the deflagration was also studied. The experiments examined the effectiveness of different ventilation techniques at reducing the hydrogen concentration in the enclosure. Ventilation techniques included natural upper and lower openings and mechanical ventilation systems. A system of evacuated sampling bottles was used to measure hydrogen concentration throughout the garage prior to ignition and at various times during the release. All experiments were documented with standard and infrared (IR) video. Flame front propagation was monitored with thermocouples. Pressures within the garage were measured by four pressure transducers mounted on the inside walls of the garage. Six free-field pressure transducers were used to measure the pressures outside the garage.
Assessing the Durability and Integrity of Natural Gas Infrastructures for Transporting and Distributing Mixtures of Hydrogen and Natural Gas
Sep 2005
Publication
Extensive infrastructure exists for the transport of natural gas and it is an obvious step to assess its use for the movement of hydrogen. The Naturalhy project’s objective is to prepare the European natural gas industry for the introduction of hydrogen by assessing the capability of the natural gas infrastructure to accept mixtures of hydrogen and natural gas. This paper presents the ongoing work within both Durability and Integrity Work Packages of the Naturalhy project. This work covers a gap in knowledge on risk assessment required for delivering H2+natural gas blends by means of the existing natural gas grids in safe operation.<br/>Experiments involving several parts of the existing infrastructure will be described that are being carried out to re-examine the major risks previously studied for natural gas including: effect of H2 on failure behaviour and corrosion of transmission pipes and their burst resistance (link to the Work Package Safety) on permeability and ageing of distribution pipes on reliability and ageing of domestic gas meters tightness to H2 of domestic appliances and their connexions. The information will be integrated into existing Durability assessment methodologies originally developed for natural gas.<br/>An Integrity Management Tool will be developed taking account of the effect of hydrogen on the materials properties. The tool should enable a cost effective selection of appropriate measures to control the structural integrity and maintaining equipment. The main measures considered are monitoring non destructive examination (pigging and non pigging) and repair strategies. The tool will cover a number of parameters e.g.: percentage of hydrogen in the gas mixture material of construction operating conditions and condition of cathodic protection. Thus the Integrity Management Tool will yield an inspection and maintenance plan based on the specific circumstances.
Modelling of Lean Uniform and Non-Uniform Hydrogen-Air Mixture Explosions in a Closed Vessel
Sep 2009
Publication
Simulation of hydrogen-air mixture explosions in a closed large-scale vessel with uniform and nonuniform mixture compositions was performed by the group of partners within the EC funded project “Hydrogen Safety as an Energy Carrier” (HySafe). Several experiments were conducted previously by Whitehouse et al. in a 10.7 m3 vertically oriented (5.7-m high) cylindrical facility with different hydrogen-air mixture compositions. Two particular experiments were selected for simulation and comparison as a Standard Benchmark Exercise (SBEP) problem: combustion of uniform 12.8% (vol.) hydrogen-air mixture and combustion of non-uniform hydrogen-air mixture with average 12.6% (vol.) hydrogen concentration across the vessel (vertical stratification 27% vol. hydrogen at the top of the vessel 2.5% vol. hydrogen at the bottom of the vessel); both mixtures were ignited at the top of the vessel. The paper presents modelling approaches used by the partners comparison of simulation results against the experiment data and conclusions regarding the non-uniform mixture combustion modelling in real-life applications.
Addressing Hydrogen Embrittlement of Metals in the Sae J2579 Fuel Cell Vehicle Tank Standard
Sep 2013
Publication
The SAE Technical Information Report (TIR) J2579 (Technical Information Report for Fuel Systems in Fuel Cell and Other Hydrogen Vehicles) has been created to address the safety performance of hydrogen storage and handling systems on vehicles. Safety qualification of the compressed hydrogen storage system is demonstrated through performance testing on prototype containment vessels. The two performance tests currently included in the SAE J2579 for evaluating unacceptable leakage and burst do not account for the potential effects of hydrogen embrittlement on structural integrity. This report describes efforts to address hydrogen embrittlement of structural metals in the framework of performance-based safety qualification. New safety qualification pathways that account for hydrogen embrittlement in the SAE J2579 include an additional pneumatic performance test using hydrogen gas or materials tests that demonstrate acceptable hydrogen embrittlement resistance of candidate structural metals.
Simulation of Flame Acceleration and DDT in H2-air Mixture with a Flux Limiter Centred Method
Sep 2005
Publication
Flame acceleration and deflagration to detonation transition (DDT) is simulated with a numerical code based on a flux limiter centred method for hyperbolic differential equations. The energy source term is calculated by a Riemann solver for the in homogeneous Euler equations for the turbulent combustion and a two-step reaction model for hydrogen-air. The transport equations are filtered for large eddy simulation (LES) and the sub filter turbulence is modelled by a transport equation for the the turbulent kinetic energy. The flame tracking is handled by the G-equation for turbulent flames. Numerical results are compared to pressure histories from physical experiments. These experiments are performed in a closed circular 4m long tube with inner diameter of 0.107m. The tube is filled with hydrogen-air mixture at 1atm which is at rest when ignited. The ignition is located at one end of the tube. The tube is fitted with an obstruction with circular opening 1m down the tube from the ignition point. The obstruction has a blockage ratio of 0.92 and a thickness of 0.01m. The obstruction creates high pressures in the ignition end of the tube and very high gas velocities in and behind the obstruction opening. The flame experiences a detonation to deflagration transition (DDT) in the super sonic jet created by the obstruction. Pressure build-up in the ignition end of the tube is simulated with some discrepancies. The DDT in the supersonic jet is simulated but the position of the DDT is strongly dependent on the simulated pressure in the ignition end.
Experimental Study on Hydrogen Explosions in a Full-scale Hydrogen Filling Station Model
Sep 2005
Publication
In order for fuel cell vehicles to develop a widespread role in society it is essential that hydrogen refuelling stations become established. For this to happen there is a need to demonstrate the safety of the refuelling stations. The work described in this paper was carried out to provide experimental information on hydrogen outflow dispersion and explosion behaviour. In the first phase homogeneous hydrogen-air-mixtures of a known concentration were introduced into an explosion chamber and the resulting flame speed and overpressures were measured. Hydrogen concentration was the dominant factor influencing the flame speed and overpressure. Secondly high-pressure hydrogen releases were initiated in a storage room to study the accumulation of hydrogen. For a steady release with a constant driving pressure the hydrogen concentration varied as the inlet airflow changed depending on the ventilation area of the room the external wind conditions and also the buoyancy induced flows generated by the accumulating hydrogen. Having obtained this basic data the realistic dispersion and explosion experiments were executed at full-scale in the hydrogen station model. High-pressure hydrogen was released from 0.8-8.0mm nozzle at the dispenser position and inside the storage room in the full-scale model of the refuelling station. Also the hydrogen releases were ignited to study the overpressures that can be generated by such releases. The results showed that overpressures that were generated following releases at the dispenser location had a clear correlation with the time of ignition distance from ignition point.
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