Transmission, Distribution & Storage
NewGasMet - Flow Metering of Renewable Gases (Biogas, Biomethane, Hydrogen, Syngas and Mixtures with Natural Gas): Criteria and Proposals for EMC Tests on Ultrasonic Meters with Non-conventional Gases
Oct 2022
Publication
The NEWGASMET project has the overall objective to increase knowledge about the accuracy and durability of commercially available gas meters after exposure to renewable gases. This should lead to the improvement of existing meter designs and flow calibration standards. One of the recently released results is a proposal for a set of test gases to represent the range of non-conventional gases in the scope of the revision of the gas meter standards. In details these were proposed to be used in the CEN/TC237 standards and the OIML-R137:2014. During the project meetings concerns have been raised regarding the applicability of such test gases to EMC tests for static meters. Today such tests are performed in air but there is a clear agreement that the behaviour of the meter during EMC tests can be influenced by the renewable gas type. At least this agreement exists for the ultrasonic measurement technology while further discussion might be needed for the mass flow. However it is not simply possible to redesign the current EMC tests by replacing air with the defined gas mixtures as this would be quite impractical especially considering the explosive nature of the test gases.
NewGasMet - Flow Metering of Renewable Gases (Biogas, Biomethane, Hydrogen, Syngas and Mixtures with Natural Gas): Effect of Hydrogen Admixture on the Accuracy of a Rotary Flow Meter
Aug 2021
Publication
With the rise of hydrogen use in the natural gas grid a need exists for reliable measurements of the amount of energy being transported and traded for hydrogen admixtures. Using VSL’s high-pressure Gas Oil Piston Prover (GOPP) primary standard the effect of mixing hydrogen with natural gas on the performance of a high-pressure gas flow meter was investigated. The error of a rotary flow meter was determined using the best possible uncertainty by calibration with the primary standard for high-pressure natural gas flow. The rotary flow meter was calibrated using both natural gas and hydrogen enriched natural gas (nominally 15% hydrogen) at two different pressures: 9 and 16 bar. Results indicate that for the rotary flow meter and hydrogen admixtures used the differences in the meter errors between high-pressure hydrogen-enriched natural gas calibration and high-pressure natural gas calibration are smaller than the corresponding differences between atmospheric pressure air calibration and high-pressure natural gas calibration.
OIES Podcast: Global Trade of Hydrogen: What is the Best Way to Transfer Hydrogen Over Long Distances?
Aug 2022
Publication
In this podcast David Ledesma talks with Rahmat Poudineh Senior Research Fellow and Aliaksei Patonia Research Fellow on issues and options with respect to long distance transportation of the hydrogen.
Hydrogen currently is mainly a local or regional commodity. If hydrogen is to become a truly global-traded commodity it needs to be transported over long transoceanic distances in an economical way. However unlike natural gas shipping compressed or liquefied hydrogen over long distances is very inefficient and expensive. At the same time hydrogen can be converted into multiple carriers with a higher energy density and higher transport capacity such as liquid ammonia toluene/methylcyclohexane (MCH) or methanol. These chemicals have their own advantages and drawbacks and their techno-economic characteristics in terms of boil-off gas and thermodynamic and conversion losses play a key role in the efficiency of transoceanic transportation of the hydrogen.
On the other hand apart from techno-economic features there are other factors to consider for long distance transportation of the hydrogen via its careers. Here such issues as safety public acceptance as well as legal and regulatory constraints may come into play. Another factor is the availability of the industries and infrastructures already developed around any of possible hydrogen carriers as well as their potential industrial applicability beyond hydrogen. Finally technological progress in other decarbonization applications and most importantly full commercialization of CCUS solutions is likely to dramatically change the approach towards long distance hydrogen transportation.
The podcast can be found on their website.
Hydrogen currently is mainly a local or regional commodity. If hydrogen is to become a truly global-traded commodity it needs to be transported over long transoceanic distances in an economical way. However unlike natural gas shipping compressed or liquefied hydrogen over long distances is very inefficient and expensive. At the same time hydrogen can be converted into multiple carriers with a higher energy density and higher transport capacity such as liquid ammonia toluene/methylcyclohexane (MCH) or methanol. These chemicals have their own advantages and drawbacks and their techno-economic characteristics in terms of boil-off gas and thermodynamic and conversion losses play a key role in the efficiency of transoceanic transportation of the hydrogen.
On the other hand apart from techno-economic features there are other factors to consider for long distance transportation of the hydrogen via its careers. Here such issues as safety public acceptance as well as legal and regulatory constraints may come into play. Another factor is the availability of the industries and infrastructures already developed around any of possible hydrogen carriers as well as their potential industrial applicability beyond hydrogen. Finally technological progress in other decarbonization applications and most importantly full commercialization of CCUS solutions is likely to dramatically change the approach towards long distance hydrogen transportation.
The podcast can be found on their website.
Hydrogen Embrittlement of a Boiler Water Wall Tube in a District Heating System
Jul 2022
Publication
A district heating system is an eco-friendly power generation facility with high energy efficiency. The boiler water wall tube used in the district heating system is exposed to extremely harsh conditions and unexpected fractures often occur during operation. In this study a corrosion failure analysis of the boiler water wall tube was performed to elucidate the failure mechanisms. The study revealed that overheating by flames was the cause of the failure of the boiler water wall tube. With an increase in temperature in a localized region the microstructure not only changed from ferrite/pearlite to martensite/bainite which made it more susceptible to brittleness but it also developed tensile residual stresses in the water-facing side by generating cavities or microcracks along the grain boundaries inside the tube. High-temperature hydrogen embrittlement combined with stress corrosion cracking initiated many microcracks inside the tube and created an intergranular fracture.
Wettability of Shale–brine–H2 System and H2-brine Interfacial Tension for Assessment of the Sealing Capacities of Shale Formations During Underground Hydrogen Storage
Jul 2022
Publication
Replacement of fossil fuels with clean hydrogen has been recognized as the most feasible approach of implementing CO2-free hydrogen economy globally. However large-scale storage of hydrogen is a critical component of hydrogen economy value chain because hydrogen is the lightest molecule and has moderately low volumetric energy content. To achieve successful storage of buoyant hydrogen at the subsurface and convenient withdrawal during the period of critical energy demand the integrity of the underground storage rock and overlying seal (caprock) must be assured. Presently there is paucity of information on hydrogen wettability of shale and the interfacial properties of H2/brine system. In this research contact angles of shale/H2/brine system and hydrogen/brine interfacial tension (IFT) were measured using Krüss drop shape analyzer (DSA 100) at 50 ◦C and varying pressure (14.7–1000 psi). A modified form of sessile drop approach was used for the contact angles measurement whereas the H2- brine IFT was measured through the pendant drop method. H2-brine IFT values decreased slightly with increasing pressure ranging between 63.68◦ at 14.7 psia and 51.29◦ at 1000 psia. The Eagle-ford shale with moderate total organic carbon (TOC) of 3.83% attained fully hydrogen-wet (contact angle of 99.9◦ ) and intermediate-wet condition (contact angle of 89.7◦ ) at 14.7 psi and 200 psi respectively. Likewise the Wolf-camp shale with low TOC (0.30%) attained weakly water-wet conditions with contact angles of 58.8◦ and 62.9◦ at 14.7 psi and 200 psi respectively. The maximum height of hydrogen that can be securely trapped by the Wolf-camp shale was approximately 325 meters whereas the value was merely 100 meters for the Eagle-ford shale. Results of this study will aid in assessment of hydrogen storage capacity of organic-rich shale (adsorption trapping) as well as evaluation of the sealing potentials of low TOC shale (caprock) during underground hydrogen storage.
Feasibility of Hydrogen Storage in Depleted Hydrocarbon Chalk Reservoirs: Assessment of Biochemical and Chemical Effects
Jul 2022
Publication
Hydrogen storage is one of the energy storage methods that can help realization of an emission free future by saving surplus renewable energy for energy deficit periods. Utilization of depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs for large-scale hydrogen storage may be associated with the risk of chemical/biochemical reactions. In the specific case of chalk reservoirs the principal reactions are abiotic calcite dissolution acetogenesis methanogenesis and biological souring. Here we use PHREEQC to evaluate the dynamics and the extent of hydrogen loss by each of these reactions in hydrogen storage scenarios for various Danish North Sea chalk hydrocarbon reservoirs. We find that: (i) Abiotic calcite dissolution does not occur in the temperature range of 40-180◦ C. (ii) If methanogens and acetogens grow as slow as the slowest growing methanogens and acetogens reported in the literature methanogenesis and acetogenesis cannot cause a hydrogen loss more than 0.6% per year. However (iii) if they proceed as fast as the fastest growing methanogens and acetogens reported in the literature a complete loss of all injected hydrogen in less than five years is possible. (iv) Co-injection of CO2 can be employed to inhibit calcite dissolution and keep the produced methane due to methanogenesis carbon neutral. (v) Biological sulfate reduction does not cause significant hydrogen loss during 10 years but it can lead to high hydrogen sulfide concentrations (1015 ppm). Biological sulfate reduction is expected to impact hydrogen storage only in early stages if the only source of sulfur substrates are the dissolved species in the brine and not rock minerals. Considering these findings we suggest that depleted chalk reservoirs may not possess chemical/biochemical risks and be good candidates for large-scale underground hydrogen storage.
What is Stored, Why, and How? Mental Models, Knowledge, and Public Acceptance of Hydrogen Storage
Nov 2016
Publication
Although electricity storage plays a decisive role for the German “Energiewende” and it has become evident that the successful diffusion of technologies is not only a question of technical feasibility but also of social acceptance research on electricity storage technologies from a social science point of view is still scarce. This study therefore empirically explores laypersons’ mindsets and knowledge related to storage technologies focusing on hydrogen. While the results indicate overall supportive attitudes and trust in hydrogen storage some misconceptions a lack of information as well as concerns were identified which should be addressed in future communication concepts.
Recent Developments in State-of-the-art Hydrogen Energy Technologies – Review of Hydrogen Storage Materials
Jan 2023
Publication
Hydrogen energy has been assessed as a clean and renewable energy source for future energy demand. For harnessing hydrogen energy to its fullest potential storage is a key parameter. It is well known that important hydrogen storage characteristics are operating pressure-temperature of hydrogen hydrogen storage capacity hydrogen absorption-desorption kinetics and heat transfer in the hydride bed. Each application needs specific properties. Every class of hydrogen storage materials has a different set of hydrogenation characteristics. Hence it is required to understand the properties of all hydrogen storage materials. The present review is focused on the state-of– the–art hydrogen storage materials including metal hydrides magnesium-based materials complex hydride systems carbonaceous materials metal organic frameworks perovskites and materials and processes based on artificial intelligence. In each category of materials‘ discovery hydrogen storage mechanism and reaction crystal structure and recent progress have been discussed in detail. Together with the fundamental synthesis process latest techniques of material tailoring like nanostructuring nanoconfinement catalyzing alloying and functionalization have also been discussed. Hydrogen energy research has a promising potential to replace fossil fuels from energy uses especially from automobile sector. In this context efforts initiated worldwide for clean hydrogen production and its use via fuel cell in vehicles is much awaiting steps towards sustainable energy demand.
Hydrogen Embrittlement Characteristics in Cold-drawn High-strength Stainless Steel Wires
Mar 2023
Publication
Hydrogen uptake and embrittlement characteristics of a cold-drawn austenitic stainless steel wire were investigated. Slow strain rate testing and fracture surface analysis were applied to determine the hydrogen embrittlement resistance providing an apparent decrease in resistance to hydrogen embrittlement for a 50% degree of cold deformation. The hydrogen content was assessed by thermal desorption and laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy establishing a correlation between the total absorbed hydrogen and the intensity of near-surface hydrogen. The sub-surface hydrogen content of the hot-rolled specimen was determined to be 791 wt.ppm.
Underground Hydrogen Storage: Application of Geochemical Modelling in a Case Study in the Molasse Basin, Upper Austria
Feb 2019
Publication
Hydrogen storage in depleted gas fields is a promising option for the large-scale storage of excess renewable energy. In the framework of the hydrogen storage assessment for the “Underground Sun Storage” project we conduct a multi-step geochemical modelling approach to study fluid–rock interactions by means of equilibrium and kinetic batch simulations. With the equilibrium approach we estimate the long-term consequences of hydrogen storage whereas kinetic models are used to investigate the interactions between hydrogen and the formation on the time scales of typical storage cycles. The kinetic approach suggests that reactions of hydrogen with minerals become only relevant over timescales much longer than the considered storage cycles. The final kinetic model considers both mineral reactions and hydrogen dissolution to be kinetically controlled. Interactions among hydrogen and aqueous-phase components seem to be dominant within the storage-relevant time span. Additionally sensitivity analyses of hydrogen dissolution kinetics which we consider to be the controlling parameter of the overall reaction system were performed. Reliable data on the kinetic rates of mineral dissolution and precipitation reactions specifically in the presence of hydrogen are scarce and often not representative of the studied conditions. These uncertainties in the kinetic rates for minerals such as pyrite and pyrrhotite were investigated and are discussed in the present work. The proposed geochemical workflow provides valuable insight into controlling mechanisms and risk evaluation of hydrogen storage projects and may serve as a guideline for future investigations.
Control of a Three-Phase Current Source Rectifier for H2 Storage Applications in AC Microgrids
Mar 2022
Publication
The share of electrical energy from renewable sources has increased considerably in recent years in an attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. To mitigate the uncertainties of these sources and to balance energy production with consumption an energy storage system (ESS) based on water electrolysis to produce hydrogen is studied. It can be applied to AC microgrids where several renewable energy sources and several loads may be connected which is the focus of the study. When excess electricity production is converted into hydrogen via water electrolysis low DC voltages and high currents are applied which needs specific power converters. The use of a three-phase buck-type current source converter in a single conversion stage allows for an adjustable DC voltage to be obtained at the terminals of the electrolyzer from a three-phase AC microgrid. The voltage control is preferred to the current control in order to improve the durability of the system. The classical control of the buck-type rectifier is generally done using two loops that correspond only to the control of its output variables. The lack of control of the input variables may generate oscillations of the grid current. Our contribution in this article is to propose a new control for the buck-type rectifier that controls both the input and output variables of the converter to avoid these grid current oscillations without the use of active damping methods. The suggested control method is based on an approach using the flatness properties of differential systems: it ensures the large-signal stability of the converter. The proposed control shows better results than the classical control especially in oscillation mitigation and dynamic performances with respect to the rejection of disturbances caused by a load step.
Extended Design Philosophy of Hydrogen Transport Pipelines
Oct 2024
Publication
This paper examines some specific design issues associated with hydrogen transportation via pipelines based on recent field development study of high-throughput hydrogen pipelines. A mechanical design review is undertaken and the current design practices and challenge are examined first. An array of key parameters considered to have significant bearing on the hydrogen pipeline general mechanical design are considered and assessed including OOR imperfections combined stress and design factors thermal gradients joint mismatch and fabrication fatigue assessment installation specifications and material consideration. Some of these are typically ignored for the conventional pipeline design but open to rationalization for hydrogen charged pipeline systems subject to material embrittlement risk arising from hydrogen absorption. Complementary to the current design standards and as a spur to discussion on the hydrogen pipeline design analysis special considerations and recommendations are proposed on materials specification additional design criteria and construction assessments and their rationale to mitigate material embrittlement with a view to improving hydrogen pipeline design reliability and integrity management potentially leading to some tangible cost saving.
Sensitivity Analysis of the Methanation Process in Underground Hydrogen Storage: A Case Study in Upper Austria
Jan 2025
Publication
Underground hydrogen storage (UHS) has attracted increasing attention as a promising technology for the largescale storage of renewable energy resources and the decarbonization of energy systems. This study aimed to identify critical parameters influencing UHS performance particularly the role of hydrogen conversion via in situ methanation and hydrogen recovery during production cycles. The main focus is the Lehen field in Upper Austria where a pilot hydrogen storage project was conducted under the leadership of RAG Austria AG. A layered reservoir model was developed on the basis of well-log data to simulate the field trials that occurred in 2016. A sensitivity analysis was performed with the one-parameter-at-a-time (OPAAT) method and the response surface methodology (RSM) to evaluate the impacts of different parameters on hydrogen methanation and hydrogen recovery. The RSM results indicate the activation energy as the most influential factor on methanation that accounts for ~20000 moles variation in generated methane significantly higher than the 6000 moles variance observed in OPAAT. However initial CO2 content contributes up to 15000 moles of methane gener ation as per RSM whereas OPAAT results in a larger impact of up to 32000 moles. These discrepancies demonstrate the limitations of isolated parameter analyses like OPAAT which may not accurately capture the complex interactions between factors influencing the methanation process. This research provides valuable in sights for optimizing UHS performance by emphasizing the influence of reservoir parameters on storage effi ciency. In addition a robust workflow for conducting comprehensive sensitivity analyses of UHS systems is established. By understanding these key factors the potential and predictability of large-scale UHS systems can be significantly improved.
Understanding Costs in Hydrogen Infrastructure Networks: A Multi-stage Approach for Spatially-aware Pipeline Design
Jan 2025
Publication
The emergence and design of hydrogen transport infrastructures are crucial steps towards the development of a hydrogen economy. However pipeline routing remains underdeveloped in hydrogen infrastructure design models despite its significant impact on the resultant cost and network configuration. Many previous studies assume uniform cost surfaces on which pipelines are designed. Studies that consider a variable cost surface focus on designing candidate networks rather than bespoke routes for a given infrastructure. This study proposes a novel multi-stage approach based on a graph-based Steiner tree with Obstacles Genetic Algorithm (StObGA) to route pipelines on a complex cost surface for multi-source multi-sink hydrogen networks. The application of StObGA results in cost savings of 20–40% compared to alternative graph-based methods that assume uniform cost surfaces. Furthermore this publication presents an in-depth methodological comparative analysis of different pipeline routing and sizing methods used in the literature and discusses their impact. Finally we demonstrate how this model can generate design variations and provide practical insights to inform industry and policymakers.
Optimal Sizing of Renewable Energy Storage: A Techno-economic Analysis of Hydrogen, Battery and Hybrid Systems Considering Degradation and Seasonal Storage
Feb 2023
Publication
Energy storage is essential to address the intermittent issues of renewable energy systems thereby enhancing system stability and reliability. This paper presents the design and operation optimisation of hydrogen/battery/ hybrid energy storage systems considering component degradation and energy cost volatility. The study ex amines a real-world case study which is a grid-connected warehouse located in a tropical climate zone with a photovoltaic solar system. An accurate and robust Multi-Objective Modified Firefly Algorithm (MOMFA) is proposed for the optimal design and operation of the energy storage systems of the case study. To further demonstrate the robustness and versatility of the optimisation method another synthetic case is tested for a location in a temperate climate zone that has a high seasonal mismatch. The modelling results show that the system in the tropical zone always provides a superior return when compared to a similar system in the temperate zone due to abundant solar resources. When comparing battery-only and hydrogen-only systems battery systems perform better than hydrogen systems in many situations with a higher self-sufficient ratio and net present value. However if there is high seasonal variation and a high requirement for using renewable energy (the penetration of renewable energy is >80 %) using hydrogen for energy storage is more beneficial. Furthermore the hybrid system (i.e. combining battery and hydrogen) outperforms battery-only and hydrogenonly systems. This is attributed to the complementary combination of hydrogen which can be used as a longterm energy storage option and battery which is utilised as a short-term option. This study also shows that storing hydrogen in a long-term strategy can lower component degradation enhance efficiency and increase the total economic performance of hydrogen and hybrid storage systems. The developed optimisation method and findings of this study can support the implementation of energy storage systems for renewable energy.
Advancements in Hydrogen Storage Vessels: A Bibliometric Analysis
Feb 2025
Publication
This bibliometric study examines the evolution of compressed-hydrogen storage technologies over the last 20 years revealing exponential growth in research and highlighting key advancements in compressed-hydrogen storage materials-based solutions and integration with renewable energy systems. The analysis highlights the pivotal role of composite material tanks and the filament-winding process in revolutionizing storage technology. These innovations have enhanced safety reduced weight and facilitated adaptation for use in automotive and industrial applications. Global research efforts are characterized by substantial international collaboration spearheaded by a small cohort of highly productive researchers and supported by a broader network of contributors. Notwithstanding the ongoing challenges pertaining to safety considerations and cost scalability the potential of hydrogen as a clean energy carrier and its role in balancing renewable energy systems serve to reinforce its importance in the transition to sustainable energy.
Insights into Site Evaluation for Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) on Gas Mixing-the Effects of Meter-Scale Heterogeniety and Associated Reservoir Characterization Parameters
Feb 2025
Publication
Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) as an emerging large-scale energy storage technology has shown great promise to ensure energy security with minimized carbon emission. A set of comprehensive UHS site evaluation criteria based on important factors that affect UHS performances is needed for its potential commercialization. This study focuses on the UHS site evaluation of gas mixing. The economic implications of gas mixing between injected hydrogen gas and the residual or cushion gas in a porous storage reservoir is an emerging problem for Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS). It is already clear that reservoir scale heterogeneity such as formation structure (e.g. formation dip angle) and facies heterogeneity of the sedimentary rock may considerably affect the reservoir-scale mechanical dispersion-induced gas mixing during UHS in high permeability braided-fluvial systems (a common depleted reservoir type for UHS). Following this finding the current study uses the processmimicking modeling software to build synthetic meandering-fluvial reservoir models. Channel dimensions and the presence of abandoned channel facies are set as testing parameters resulting in 4 simulation cases with 200 realizations. Numerical flow simulations are performed on these models to investigate and compare the effects of reservoir and metre-scale heterogeneity on UHS gas mixing. Through simulation channel dimensions (reservoir-scale heterogeneity) are found to affect the uncertainty of produced gas composition due to mixing (represented by the P10-P90 difference of hydrogen fraction in a produced stream) by up to 42%. The presence of abandoned channel facies (metre-scale heterogeneity) depending on their architectural relationship with meander belts could also influence the gas mixing process to a comparable extent (up to 40%). Moreover we show that there is no clear statistical correlation between gas mixing and typical reservoir characterization parameters such as original gas in place (OGIP) average reservoir permeability and the Dykstra-Parsons coefficient. Instead the average time of travel of all reservoir cells calculated from flow diagnostics shows a negative correlation with the level of gas mixing. These results reveal the importance of 3D reservoir architecture analysis (integration of multiple levels of heterogeneity) to UHS site evaluation on gas mixing in depleted gas reservoirs. This study herein provides valuable insights into UHS site evaluation regarding gas mixing.
The Development, Current Status and Challenges of Salt Cavern Hydrogen Storage Technology in China
Feb 2025
Publication
This paper provides a systematic visualization of the development current status and challenges of salt cavern hydrogen storage technology based on the relevant literature from the past five years in the Web of Science Core Collection database. Using VOSviewer (version 1.6.20) and CiteSpace software (advanced version 6.3.R3) this study analyzes the field from a knowledge mapping perspective. The findings reveal that global research hotspots are primarily focused on multi-energy collaboration integration of renewable energy systems and exploration of commercialization highlighting the essential role of salt cavern hydrogen storage in driving the energy transition and promoting sustainable development. In China research mainly concentrates on theoretical innovations and technological optimizations to address complex geological conditions. Despite the rapid growth in the number of Chinese publications unresolved challenges remain such as the complexity of layered salt rock and thermodynamic coupling effects during highfrequency injection and extraction as well as issues concerning permeability and microbial activity. Moving forward China’s salt cavern hydrogen storage technology should focus on strengthening engineering practices suited to local geological conditions and enhancing the application of intelligent technologies thereby facilitating the translation of theoretical research into practical applications.
Long-Duration Energy Storage: A Critical Enabler for Renewable Integration and Decarbonization
Jan 2025
Publication
This paper focuses on the critical role of long-duration energy storage (LDES) technologies in facilitating renewable energy integration and achieving carbon neutrality. It presents a systematic review of four primary categories: mechanical energy storage chemical energy storage electrochemical energy storage and thermal energy storage. The study begins by analyzing the technical advantages and geographical constraints of pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) and compressed air energy storage (CAES) in high-capacity applications. It then explores the potential of hydrogen and synthetic fuels for long-duration clean energy storage. The section on electrochemical energy storage highlights the high energy density and flexible scalability of lithium-ion batteries and redox flow batteries. Finally the paper evaluates innovative advancements in large-scale thermal energy storage technologies including sensible heat storage latent heat storage and thermochemical heat storage. By comparing the performance metrics application scenarios and development prospects of various energy storage technologies this work provides theoretical support and practical insights for maximizing renewable energy utilization and driving the sustainable transformation of global energy systems.
Repurposing Natural Gas Pipelines for Hydrogen: Limits and Options from a Case Study in Germany
Jul 2024
Publication
We investigate the challenges and options for repurposing existing natural gas pipelines for hydrogen transportation. Challenges of re-purposing are mainly related to safety and due to the risk of hydrogen embrittlement of pipeline steels and the smaller molecular size of the gas. From an economic perspective the lower volumetric energy density of hydrogen compared to natural gas is a challenge. We investigate three pipeline repurposing options in depth: a) no modification to the pipeline but enhanced maintenance b) use of gaseous inhibitors and c) the pipe-in-pipe approach. The levelized costs of transportation of these options are compared for the case of the German Norddeutsche Erdgasleitung (NEL) pipeline. We find a similar cost range for all three options. This indicates that other criteria such as the sunk costs public acceptance and consumer requirements are likely to shape the decision making for gas pipeline repurposing.
Hydrogen Impact on Transmission Pipeline Risk: Probabilistic Analysis of Failure Cases
Jan 2025
Publication
Transmission pipelines are the safest and most economical solution for long-distance hydrogen delivery. However safety and reliability issues such as hydrogen’s impact on material properties including fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth could restrict pipeline development. This impact may also increase the risk of several pipeline failure causes including excavation damage corrosion earth movement material failures and other hydrogen damage mechanisms. While many quantitative risk assessment (QRA) studies exist for natural gas pipelines limited work focuses on hydrogen pipelines; the influence of hydrogen must be considered. This work presents a systematic causal model for hydrogen pipeline failures that incorporates multiple failure causes quantifying hydrogen influence on pipeline failures and analyzing how changes in hydrogen effects or operating conditions impact multiple failure causes. According to the results (1) hydrogen has a relatively minor impact on corrosion-related failure; (2) hydrogen greatly affects crack damage (the failure probability can increase by over 1000 times); (3) excavation damage is nearly independent of hydrogen’s effects; (4) earth movement damage shows increased susceptibility (the failure probability can increase by over 10 times). The hydrogen effects change the relative susceptibility of pipelines to these failure causes therefore to implement tailored safety measures under varying operating conditions.
High-Entropy Alloys: Innovative Materials with Unique Properties for Hydrogen Storage and Technologies for Their Production
Jan 2025
Publication
This paper presents a review of a number of works devoted to the studies of high-entropy alloys (HEAs). As is known HEAs represent a new class of materials that have attracted the attention of scientists due to their unique properties and prospects of application in hydrogen power engineering. The peculiarity of HEAs is their high entropy of mixing which provides phase stability and flexibility in developing materials with given characteristics. The main focus of this paper is on the application of HEAs for solid-state hydrogen storage their physicochemical and mechanical properties and synthesis technologies. Recent advances in the hydrogen absorption properties of HEAs are analyzed including their ability to efficiently absorb and desorb hydrogen at moderate temperatures and pressures. Prospects for their use in the development of environmentally safe and efficient hydrogen storage systems are considered. The work also includes a review of synthesis methods aimed at optimizing the properties of HEAs for hydrogen energy applications.
New Flow Simulation Framework for Underground Hydrogen Storage Modelling Considering Microbial and Geochemical Reactions
Jul 2025
Publication
The widespread use of hydrogen as an energy source relies on efficient large-scale storage techniques. Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) is a promising solution to balance the gap between renewable energy production and constant energy demand. UHS employs geological structures like salt caverns depleted reservoirs or aquifers for hydrogen storage enabling long-term and scalable storage capacity. Therefore robust and reliable predictive tools are essential to assess the risks associated with geological hydrogen storage. This paper presents a novel reactive transport model called “Underground Gas Flow simulAtions with Coupled bio-geochemical reacTions” or “UGFACT” designed for various gas injection processes accounting for geochemical and microbial reactions. The flow module and geochemical reactions in the UGFACT model were verified against two commercial reservoir simulators E300 and CMG-GEM showing excellent agreement in fluid flow variables and geochemical behaviour. A major step forward of this model is to integrate flow dynamics geochemical reactions and microbial activity. UGFACT was used to conduct a simple storage cycle in a 1D geometry across three different reservoirs each with different mineralogies and water compositions: Bentheimer sandstone Berea sandstone and Grey Berea sandstone under three microbial conditions (“No Reaction” “Moderate Rate” “High Rate”). The findings suggest that Bentheimer sandstone and Berea sandstone sites may experience severe effects from ongoing microbial and geochemical reactions whereas Grey Berea sandstone shows no significant H2 loss. Additionally the model predicts that under the high-rate microbial conditions the hydrogen consumption rate can reach to as much as 11 mmol of H2 per kilogram of water per day (mmol / kg⋅day) driven by methanogenesis and acetogenesis.
Hydrogen Underground Storage in Silica-Clay Shales: Experimental and Density Functional Theory Investigation
Nov 2023
Publication
In the context of reducing the global emissions of greenhouse gaseshydrogen (H2) has become an attractive alternative to substitute the current fossil fuels.However its properties seasonal fluctuations and the lack of extended energy stabilitymade it extremely difficult to be economically and safely stored for a long term in recentyears. Therefore this paper investigated the potential of shale gas reservoirs (rich andlow clay−rich silica minerals) to store hydrogen upon demand. Density functional theorymolecular simulation was employed to explore hydrogen adsorption on the silica−kaolinite interface and the physisorption of hydrogen on the shale surface is revealed.This is supported by low adsorption energies on different adsorption configurations(0.01 to −0.21 eV) and the lack of charge transfer showed by Bader charge analysis.Moreover the experimental investigation was employed to consider the temperature(50−100 °C) and pressure (up to 20 bar) impact on hydrogen uptake on Midra shalespecifically palygorskite (100%) which is rich in silicate clay minerals (58.83% SiO2).The results showed that these formations do not chemically or physically maintainhydrogen; hence hydrogen can be reversibly stored. The results highlight the potential of shale gas reservoirs to store hydrogen asno hydrogen is adsorbed on the shale surface so there will be no hydrogen loss and no adverse effect on the shale’s structuralintegrity and it can be safely stored in shale reservoirs and recovered upon demand.
The Case of Renewable Methane by and with Green Hydrogen as the Storage and Transport Medium for Intermittent Wind and Solar PV Energy
May 2024
Publication
Long-duration energy storage is the key challenge facing renewable energy transition in the future of well over 50% and up to 75% of primary energy supply with intermittent solar and wind electricity while up to 25% would come from biomass which requires traditional type storage. To this end chemical energy storage at grid scale in the form of fuel appears to be the ideal option for wind and solar power. Renewable hydrogen is a much-considered fuel along with ammonia. However these fuels are not only difficult to transport over long distances but they would also require totally new and prohibitively expensive infrastructure. On the other hand the existing natural gas pipeline infrastructure in developed economies can not only transmit a mixture of methane with up to 20% hydrogen without modification but it also has more than adequate long-duration storage capacity. This is confirmed by analyzing the energy economies of the USA and Germany both possessing well-developed natural gas transmission and storage systems. It is envisioned that renewable methane will be produced via well-established biological and/or chemical processes reacting green hydrogen with carbon dioxide the latter to be separated ideally from biogas generated via the biological conversion of biomass to biomethane. At the point of utilization of the methane to generate power and a variety of chemicals the released carbon dioxide would be also sequestered. An essentially net zero carbon energy system would be then become operational. The current conversion efficiency of power to hydrogen/methane to power on the order of 40% would limit the penetration of wind and solar power. Conversion efficiencies of over 75% can be attained with the on-going commercialization of solid oxide electrolysis and fuel cells for up to 75% penetration of intermittent renewable power. The proposed hydrogen/methane system would then be widely adopted because it is practical affordable and sustainable.
High-pressure Gaseous Hydrogen Permeation Test Method - Property of Polymeric Materials for High-pressure Hydrogen Devices
Aug 2020
Publication
Polymeric materials are widely used in hydrogen energy system such as FCEV and hydrogen refueling stations under high-pressure condition. The permeation property (coefficients of permeation diffusion and solubility) of polymers under high-pressure hydrogen condition should be discussed as parameters to develop those devices. Also the property should be determined to understand influence of the compression by the pressure on polymer materials. A device which can measure gas permeation property of polymer materials accurately in equilibrium state under high-pressure environment is developed and the reliability of the measurements is ensured. High-pressure hydrogen gas permeability characteristics up to 100 MPa are measured for high-density polyethylene. An advantage of the method is discussed comparing with the non-equilibrium state method focusing on the hydrostatic pressure effect. Deterioration of hydrogen permeability is observed along with the decrease of diffusion coefficient which is supposedly affected by hydrostatic compression effect with the increase of environment pressure.
A Design Guide to Tapered Conformable Pressure Tanks for Liquid Hydrogen Storage
Feb 2025
Publication
Liquid hydrogen has the potential to significantly reduce in-flight carbon emissions in the aviation industry. Among the most promising aircraft configurations for future hydrogen-powered aviation are the blended wing body and the pure flying wing configurations. However their tapered and flattened airframe designs pose a challenge in accommodating liquid hydrogen storage tanks. This paper presents a design guide to tapered conformable pressure tanks for liquid hydrogen storage. The proposed tank configurations feature a multi-bubble layout and are subject to low internal differential pressure. The objective is to provide tank designers with simple geometric rules and practical guidelines to simplify the design process of tapered multi-bubble pressure tanks. Various tank configurations are discussed starting with a simple tapered two-bubble tank and advancing to more complex tapered configurations with a multi-segment and multi-bubble layout. A comprehensive design methodology is established providing tank designers with a step-by-step design procedure and highlighting the practical guidelines in each step of the design process.
Hydrogen Liquefaction and Storage: Recent Progress and Perspectives
Feb 2023
Publication
The global energy sector accounts for ~75% of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Low-carbon energy carriers such as hydrogen are seen as necessary to enable an energy transition away from the current fossilderived energy paradigm. Thus the hydrogen economy concept is a key part of decarbonizing the global en ergy system. Hydrogen storage and transport are two of key elements of hydrogen economy. Hydrogen can be stored in various forms including its gaseous liquid and solid states as well as derived chemical molecules. Among these liquid hydrogen due to its high energy density ambient storage pressure high hydrogen purity (no contamination risks) and mature technology (stationary liquid hydrogen storage) is suitable for the transport of large-volumes of hydrogen over long distances and has gained increased attention in recent years. However there are critical obstacles to the development of liquid hydrogen systems namely an energy intensive liquefaction process (~13.8 kWh/kgLH2) and high hydrogen boil-off losses (liquid hydrogen evaporation during storage 1–5% per day). This review focuses on the current state of technology development related to the liquid hydrogen supply chain. Hydrogen liquefaction cryogenic storage technologies liquid hydrogen transmission methods and liquid hydrogen regasification processes are discussed in terms of current industrial applications and underlying technologies to understand the drivers and barriers for liquid hydrogen to become a commer cially viable part of the emerging global hydrogen economy. A key finding of this technical review is that liquid hydrogen can play an important role in the hydrogen economy - as long as necessary technological transport and storage innovations are achieved in parallel to technology demonstrations and market development efforts by countries committed liquid hydrogen as part of their hydrogen strategies.
Hydrogen Supply Chain for Future Hydrogen-fuelled Railway in the UK: Transport Sector Focused
Aug 2024
Publication
Though being attractive on railway decarbonisation for regional lines excessive cost caused by immature hydrogen supply chain is one of the significant hurdles for promoting hydrogen traction to rolling stocks. Therefore we conduct bespoke research on the UK’s hydrogen supply chain for railway concentrating on hydrogen transportation. Firstly a map for the planned hydrogen production plants and potential hydrogen lines is developed with the location capacity and usage. A spatially explicit model for the hydrogen supply chain is then introduced which optimises the existing grid-based methodology on accuracy and applicability. Compressed hydrogen at three pressures and liquid hydrogen are considered as the mediums incorporating by road and rail transport. Furthermore three scenarios for hydrogen rail penetration are simulated respectively to discuss the levelised cost and the most suitable national transport network. The results show that the developed model with mix-integer linear programming (MILP) can well design the UK’s hydrogen distribution for railway traction. Moreover the hydrogen transport medium and vehicle should adjust to suit for different era where the penetration of hydrogen traction varies. The levelised cost of hydrogen (LCOH) decreases from 6.13 £/kg to 5.13 £/kg on average from the conservative scenario to the radical scenario. Applying different transport combinations according to the specific situation can satisfy the demand while reducing cost for multi-supplier and multitargeting hydrogen transport.
Diffusive Mixing Between Hydrogen and Carbon Dioxide: Implications for Underground Hydrogen Storage
Feb 2025
Publication
The diffusive process between hydrogen (H2) and cushion gas affects the purity of H2 stored in the subsurface porous media. It is essential to understand the diffusive mass transfer and its impact on the migration of H2. Carbon dioxide (CO2) serves as a promising option for cushion gas. However due to experimental challenges there has been limited research conducted to quantify the diffusion between H2 and CO2 under reservoir conditions. For the first time we quantitatively measured the horizontal diffusive process between H2 and CO2 without convection interference in a high-pressure optical cell. The Raman spectroscopy is used to monitor the diffusive process in real-time and the diffusion coefficient is determined based on the measured concentration profiles. We showed that the Fick’s second law with a constant diffusion coefficient describes adequately the observed diffusive process. The resulting diffusion coefficient scales linearly with the reciprocal viscosity of CO2. Based on the measured diffusion coefficient we conducted a numerical study at field-scale. Results suggest that the dispersive mixing plays a role in the purity of produced H2.
Modelling Hydrogen Storage and Filling Systems: A Dynamic and Customizable Toolkit
Aug 2023
Publication
Hydrogen plays a vital role in decarbonizing the mobility sector. With the number of hydrogen vehicles expected to drastically increase a network of refuelling stations needs to be built to keep up with the hydrogen demand. However further research and development on hydrogen refuelling infrastructure storage and standardization is required to overcome technical and economic barriers. Simulation tools can reduce time and costs during the design phase but existing models do not fully support calculations of complete and arbitrary system layouts. Therefore a flexible simulation toolbox for rapid investigations of hydrogen refuelling and extraction processes as well as development of refuelling infrastructure vehicle tank systems and refuelling protocols for non-standardized applications was developed. Our model library H2VPATT comprises of typical components found in refuelling infrastructure. The key component is the hydrogen tank model. The simulation model was successfully validated with measurement data from refuelling tests of a 320 l type III tank.
Review on the Thermal Neutrality of Application-orientated Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier for Hydrogen Energy Storage and Delivery
Aug 2023
Publication
The depletion and overuse of fossil fuels present formidable challenge to energy supply system and environment. The human society is in great need of clean renewable and sustainable energy which can guarantee the long-term utilization without leading to escalation of greenhouse effect. Hydrogen as an extraordinary secondary energy is capable of realizing the target of environmental protection and transferring the intermittent primary energy to the application terminal while its nature of low volumetric energy density and volatility need suitable storage method and proper carrier. In this context liquid organic hydrogen carrier (LOHC) among a series of storage methods such as compressed and liquefied hydrogen provokes a considerable amount of research interest since it is proven to be a suitable carrier for hydrogen with safety and stability. However the dehydrogenation of hydrogen-rich LOHC materials is an endothermic process and needs large energy consumption which hampers the scale up of the LOHC system. The heat issue is thus essential to be addressed for fulfilling the potential of LOHC. In this work several strategies of heat intensification and management for LOHC system including the microwave irradiation circulation of exhaust heat and direct LOHC fuel cell are summarized and analyzed to provide suggestions and directions for future research.
Recent Developments in Materials for Physical Hydrogen Storage: A Review
Jan 2024
Publication
The depletion of reliable energy sources and the environmental and climatic repercussions of polluting energy sources have become global challenges. Hence many countries have adopted various renewable energy sources including hydrogen. Hydrogen is a future energy carrier in the global energy system and has the potential to produce zero carbon emissions. For the non-fossil energy sources hydrogen and electricity are considered the dominant energy carriers for providing end-user services because they can satisfy most of the consumer requirements. Hence the development of both hydrogen production and storage is necessary to meet the standards of a “hydrogen economy”. The physical and chemical absorption of hydrogen in solid storage materials is a promising hydrogen storage method because of the high storage and transportation performance. In this paper physical hydrogen storage materials such as hollow spheres carbon-based materials zeolites and metal– organic frameworks are reviewed. We summarize and discuss the properties hydrogen storage densities at different temperatures and pressures and the fabrication and modification methods of these materials. The challenges associated with these physical hydrogen storage materials are also discussed.
Research Progress and Application Prospects of Solid-State Hydrogen Storage Technology
Apr 2024
Publication
Solid-state hydrogen storage technology has emerged as a disruptive solution to the “last mile” challenge in large-scale hydrogen energy applications garnering significant global research attention. This paper systematically reviews the Chinese research progress in solid-state hydrogen storage material systems thermodynamic mechanisms and system integration. It also quantitatively assesses the market potential of solid-state hydrogen storage across four major application scenarios: on-board hydrogen storage hydrogen refueling stations backup power supplies and power grid peak shaving. Furthermore it analyzes the bottlenecks and challenges in industrialization related to key materials testing standards and innovation platforms. While acknowledging that the cost and performance of solid-state hydrogen storage are not yet fully competitive the paper highlights its unique advantages of high safety energy density and potentially lower costs showing promise in new energy vehicles and distributed energy fields. Breakthroughs in new hydrogen storage materials like magnesium-based and vanadium-based materials coupled with improved standards specifications and innovation mechanisms are expected to propel solid-state hydrogen storage into a mainstream technology within 10–15 years with a market scale exceeding USD 14.3 billion. To accelerate the leapfrog development of China’s solid-state hydrogen storage industry increased investment in basic research focused efforts on key core technologies and streamlining the industry chain from materials to systems are recommended. This includes addressing challenges in passenger vehicles commercial vehicles and hydrogen refueling stations and building a collaborative innovation ecosystem involving government industry academia research finance and intermediary entities to support the achievement of carbon peak and neutrality goals and foster a clean low-carbon safe and efficient modern energy system.
Outlook and Challenges for Hydrogen Storage in Nanoporous Materials
Feb 2016
Publication
Darren P. Broom,
Colin Webb,
Katherine Hurst,
P. A. Parilla,
Thomas Gennett,
C. M. Brown,
Renju Zacharia,
E. Tylianakis,
E. Klontzas,
George E. Froudakis,
Th. A. Steriotis,
Pantelis N. Trikalitis,
Donald L. Anton,
B. Hardy,
David A. Tamburello,
Claudio Corgnale,
B. A. van Hassel,
D. Cossement,
Richard Chahine and
Michael Hirscher
Considerable progress has been made recently in the use of nanoporous materials for hydrogen storage. In this article the current status of the field and future challenges are discussed ranging from important open fundamental questions such as the density and volume of the adsorbed phase and its relationship to overall storage capacity to the development of new functional materials and complete storage system design. With regard to fundamentals the use of neutron scattering to study adsorbed H2 suitable adsorption isotherm equations and the accurate computational modelling and simulation of H2 adsorption are discussed. The new materials covered include flexible metal–organic frameworks core–shell materials and porous organic cage compounds. The article concludes with a discussion of the experimental investigation of real adsorptive hydrogen storage tanks the improvement in the thermal conductivity of storage beds and new storage system concepts and designs.
Hydrogen Trapping and Embrittlement in Metals - A Review
Apr 2024
Publication
Hydrogen embrittlement in metals (HE) is a serious challenge for the use of high strength materials in engineering practice and a major barrier to the use of hydrogen for global decarbonization. Here we describe the factors and variables that determine HE susceptibility and provide an overview of the latest understanding of HE mechanisms. We discuss hydrogen uptake and how it can be managed. We summarize hydrogen trapping and the techniques used for its characterization. We also review literature that argues that hydrogen trapping can be used to decrease HE susceptibility. We discuss the future research that is required to advance the understanding of HE and hydrogen trapping and to develop HE-resistant alloys.
Assessing Opportunities and Weaknesses of Green Hydrogen Transport via LOHC through a Detailed Techno-economic Analysis
Aug 2023
Publication
In the transition towards a more sustainable energy system hydrogen is seen as the key low-emission energy source. However the limited H2 volumetric density hinders its transportation. To overcome this issue liquid organic hydrogen carriers (LOHCs) molecules that can be hydrogenated and upon arrival dehydrogenated for H2 release have been proposed as hydrogen transport media. Considering toluene and dibenzyltoluene as representative carriers this work offers a systematic methodology for the analysis and the comparison of LOHCs in view of identifying cost-drivers of the overall value-chain. A detailed Aspen Plus process simulation is provided for hydrogenation and dehydrogenation sections. Simulation results are used as input data for the economic assessment. The process economics reveals that dehydrogenation is the most impactful cost-item together with the carrier initial loading the latter related to the LOHC transport distance. The choice of the most suitable molecule as H2 carrier ultimately is a trade-off between its hydrogenation enthalpy and cost.
The Potential Role of Ammonia for Hydrogen Storage and Transport: A Critical Review of Challenges and Opportunities
Aug 2023
Publication
Hydrogen is being included in several decarbonization strategies as a potential contributor in some hard-to-abate applications. Among other challenges hydrogen storage represents a critical aspect to be addressed either for stationary storage or for transporting hydrogen over long distances. Ammonia is being proposed as a potential solution for hydrogen storage as it allows storing hydrogen as a liquid chemical component at mild conditions. Nevertheless the use of ammonia instead of pure hydrogen faces some challenges including the health and environmental issues of handling ammonia and the competition with other markets such as the fertilizer market. In addition the technical and economic efficiency of single steps such as ammonia production by means of the Haber–Bosch process ammonia distribution and storage and possibly the ammonia cracking process to hydrogen affects the overall supply chain. The main purpose of this review paper is to shed light on the main aspects related to the use of ammonia as a hydrogen energy carrier discussing technical economic and environmental perspectives with the aim of supporting the international debate on the potential role of ammonia in supporting the development of hydrogen pathways. The analysis also compares ammonia with alternative solutions for the long-distance transport of hydrogen including liquefied hydrogen and other liquid organic carriers such as methanol.
Prospects for Long-Distance Cascaded Liquid—Gaseous Hydrogen Delivery: An Economic and Environmental Assessment
Oct 2024
Publication
As an important energy source to achieve carbon neutrality green hydrogen has always faced the problems of high use cost and unsatisfactory environmental benefits due to its remote production areas. Therefore a liquid-gaseous cascade green hydrogen delivery scheme is proposed in this article. In this scheme green hydrogen is liquefied into high-density and low-pressure liquid hydrogen to enable the transport of large quantities of green hydrogen over long distances. After longdistance transport the liquid hydrogen is stored and then gasified at transfer stations and converted into high-pressure hydrogen for distribution to the nearby hydrogen facilities in cities. In addition this study conducted a detailed model evaluation of the scheme around the actual case of hydrogen energy demand in Chengdu City in China and compared it with conventional hydrogen delivery methods. The results show that the unit hydrogen cost of the liquid-gaseous cascade green hydrogen delivery scheme is only 51.58 CNY/kgH2 and the dynamic payback periods of long- and short-distance transportation stages are 13.61 years and 7.02 years respectively. In terms of carbon emissions this scheme only generates indirect carbon emissions of 2.98 kgCO2/kgH2 without using utility electricity. In sum both the economic and carbon emission analyses demonstrate the advantages of the liquidgaseous cascade green hydrogen delivery scheme. With further reductions in electricity prices and liquefication costs this scheme has the potential to provide an economically/environmentally superior solution for future large-scale green hydrogen applications.
Energy Storage Strategy - Phase 3
Feb 2023
Publication
This report evaluates the main options to provide required hydrogen storage capacity including the relevant system-level considerations and provides recommendations for further actions including low-regrets actions that are needed in a range of scenarios.
Prospectivity Analysis for Underground Hydrogen Storage, Taranaki Basin, Aotearoa New Zealand: A Multi-criteria Decision-making Approach
May 2024
Publication
Seasonal underground hydrogen storage (UHS) in porous media provides an as yet untested method for storing surplus renewable energy and balancing our energy demands. This study investigates the technical suitability for UHS in depleted hydrocarbon fields and one deep aquifer site in Taranaki Basin Aotearoa New Zealand. Prospective sites are assessed using a decision tree approach providing a “fast-track” method for identifying potential sites and a decision matrix approach for ranking optimal sites. Based on expert elicitation the most important factors to consider are storage capacity reservoir depth and parameters that affect hydrogen injectivity/withdrawal and containment. Results from both approaches suggest that Paleogene reservoirs from gas (or gas cap) fields provide the best option for demonstrating UHS in Aotearoa New Zealand and that the country’s projected 2050 hydrogen storage demand could be exceeded by developing one or two high ranking sites. Lower priority is assigned to heterolithic and typically finer grained labile and clay-rich Miocene oil reservoirs and to deep aquifers that have no proven hydrocarbon containment.
Energy Storage Strategy - Phase 2
Feb 2023
Publication
This document is phase 2 of the energy storage strategy study and it covers the storage challenges of the energy transition. We start in section 3 by covering historical and current natural gas imports into the UK and what these could look like in the future. In section 4 we explore what demand for hydrogen could look like – this has a high level of uncertainty and future policy decisions will have significant impacts on hydrogen volumes and annual variations. We generated two hydrogen storage scenarios based on National Grid’s Future Energy Scenarios and the Climate Change Committee’s Sixth Carbon Budget to assess the future need for hydrogen storage in the UK. We also looked at an extreme weather scenario resulting from an area of high-pressure settled over the British Isles resulting in very low ambient temperatures an unusually high demand for heating and almost no wind generation. In section 5 we investigate options for hydrogen storage and build on work previously carried out by SGN. We discuss the differences between the properties of hydrogen and natural gas and how this affects line pack and depletion of line pack. We discuss flexibility on the supply and demand side and how this can impact on hydrogen storage. We provide a summary table which compares the various options for storage. In section 5 we explore hydrogen trade and options for import and export. Using information from other innovation projects we also discuss production of hydrogen from nuclear power and the impact of hybrid appliances on gas demand for domestic heat. In section 7 we discuss the outputs from a stakeholder workshop with about 40 stakeholders across industry academia and government. The workshop covered UK gas storage strategy to date hydrogen demand and corresponding storage scenarios to 2050 including consideration of seasonal variation and storage options.
OIES Podcast - Hydrogen Pipelines vs. HVDC Lines
Nov 2023
Publication
In this podcast David Ledesma talks to Aliaksei Patonia and Veronika Lenivova about Hydrogen pipelines and high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission lines and how Hydrogen pipelines offer the advantage of transporting larger energy volumes but existing projects are dwarfed by the vast networks of HVDC transmission lines. The podcast discusses how advocates for hydrogen pipelines see potential in expanding these networks capitalizing on hydrogen’s physical similarities to natural gas and the potential for cost savings. However hydrogen’s unique characteristics such as its small molecular size and compression requirements present construction challenges. On the other hand HVDC lines while less voluminous excel in efficiently transmitting green electrons over long distances. They already form an extensive global network and their efficiency makes them suitable for various applications. Yet intermittent renewable energy sources pose challenges for both hydrogen and electricity systems necessitating solutions like storage and blending.
The podcast can be found on their website.
The podcast can be found on their website.
Analysis of Implementing Hydrogen Storage for Surplus Energy from PV Systems in Polish Households
Jul 2025
Publication
One of the methods for mitigating the duck curve phenomenon in photovoltaic (PV) energy systems is storing surplus energy in the form of hydrogen. However there is a lack of studies focused on residential PV systems that assess the impact of hydrogen storage on the reduction of energy flow imbalance to and from the national grid. This study presents an analysis of hydrogen energy storage based on real-world data from a household PV installation. Using simulation methods grounded in actual electricity consumption and hourly PV production data the research identified the storage requirements including the required operating hours and the capacity of the hydrogen tank. The analysis was based on a 1 kW electrolyzer and a fuel cell representing the smallest and most basic commercially available units and included a sensitivity analysis. At the household level—represented by a singlefamily home with an annual energy consumption and PV production of approximately 4–5 MWh over a two-year period—hydrogen storage enabled the production of 49.8 kg and 44.6 kg of hydrogen in the first and second years respectively. This corresponded to the use of 3303 kWh of PV-generated electricity and an increase in self-consumption from 30% to 64%. Hydrogen storage helped to smooth out peak energy flows from the PV system decreasing the imbalance from 5.73 kWh to 4.42 kWh. However while it greatly improves self-consumption its capacity to mitigate power flow imbalance further is constrained; substantial improvements would necessitate a much larger electrolyzer proportional in size to the PV system’s output.
Underground Hydrogen Storage Safety: Experimental Study of Hydrogen Diffusion through Caprocks
Jan 2024
Publication
Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) provides a large-scale and safe solution to balance the fluctuations in energy production from renewable sources and energy consumption but requires a proper and detailed characterization of the candidate reservoirs. The scope of this study was to estimate the hydrogen diffusion coefficient for real caprock samples from two natural gas storage reservoirs that are candidates for underground hydrogen storage. A significant number of adsorption/desorption tests were carried out using a Dynamic Gravimetric Vapor/Gas Sorption System. A total of 15 samples were tested at the reservoir temperature of 45 °C and using both hydrogen and methane. For each sample two tests were performed with the same gas. Each test included four partial pressure steps of sorption alternated with desorption. After applying overshooting and buoyancy corrections the data were then interpreted using the early time approximation of the solution to the diffusion equation. Each interpretable partial pressure step provided a value of the diffusion coefficient. In total more than 90 estimations of the diffusion coefficient out of 120 partial pressure steps were available allowing a thorough comparison between the diffusion of hydrogen and methane: hydrogen in the range of 1 × 10−10 m2 /s to 6 × 10−8 m2 /s and methane in the range of 9 × 10−10 m2 /s to 2 × 10−8 m2 /s. The diffusion coefficients measured on wet samples are 2 times lower compared to those measured on dry samples. Hysteresis in hydrogen adsorption/desorption was also observed.
Microfluidic Storage Capacity and Residual Trapping During Cyclic Injections: Implications for Underground Storage
Apr 2023
Publication
Long-term and large-scale H2 storage is vital for a sustainable H2 economy. Research in underground H2 storage (UHS) in porous media is emerging but the understanding of H2 reconnection and recovery mechanisms under cyclic loading is not yet adequate. This paper reports a qualitative and quantitative investigation of H2 reconnection and recovery mechanisms in repeated injection-withdrawal cycles. Here we use microfluidics to experimentally investigate up to 5 cycles of H2 injection and withdrawal under a range of injection rates at shallow reservoir storage conditions. We find that H2 storage capacities increase with increasing injection rate and range between ~10% and 60%. The residual H2 saturation is in the same range between cycles (30e40%) but its distribution in the pore space visually appears to be hysteretic. In most cases the residually trapped H2 reconnects in the subsequent injection cycle predominantly in proximity to the large pore clusters. Our results provide valuable experimental data to advance the understanding of multiple H2 injection cycles in UHS schemes.
Modelling Underground Hydrogen Storage: A State-of-the-art Review of Fundamental Approaches and Findings
Dec 2023
Publication
This review presents a state-of-the-art of geochemical geomechanical and hydrodynamic modelling studies in the Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) domain. Geochemical modelling assessed the reactivity of hydrogen and res pective fluctuations in hydrogen losses using kinetic reaction rates rock mineralogy brine salinity and the integration of hydrogen redox reactions. Existing geomechanics studies offer an array of coupled hydromechanical models suggesting a decline in rock failure during the withdrawal phase in aquifers compared to injection phase. Hydrodynamic modelling evaluations indicate the critical importance of relative permeability hysteresis in determining the UHS performance. Solubility and diffusion of hydrogen gas appear to have minimal impact on UHS. Injection and production rates cushion gas deployment and reservoir heterogeneity however significantly affect the UHS performance stressing the need for thorough modelling and experimental studies. Most of the current UHS modelling efforts focus on assessing the hydrodynamic aspects which are crucial for understanding the viability and safety of UHS. In contrast the lesser-explored geochemical and geomechanical considerations point to potential research gaps. A variety of modelling software tools such as CMG Eclipse COMSOL and PHREEQC evaluated those UHS underlying effects along with a few recent applications of datadriven-based Machine Learning (ML) techniques for enhanced accuracy. This review identified several unresolved challenges in UHS modelling: pronounced lack of expansive datasets leading to a gap between model predictions and their practical reliability; need robust methodologies capable of capturing natural subsurface heterogeneity while upscaling from precise laboratory data to field-scale conditions; demanding intensive computational resources and novel strategies to enhance simulation efficiency; and a gap in addressing geological uncertainties in subsurface environments suggesting that methodologies from oil reservoir simulations could be adapted for UHS. This comprehensive review offers a critical synthesis of the prevailing approaches challenges and research gaps in the domain of UHS thus providing a valuable reference document for further modelling efforts facilitating the informed advancements in this critical domain towards the realization of sustainable energy solutions.
Hydrogen Embrittlement Sensitivity of X70 Welded Pipe Under a High-pressure Pure Hydrogen Environment
Nov 2024
Publication
With the rapid development of hydrogen pipelines their safety issues have become increasingly prominent. In order to evaluate the properties of pipeline materials under a highpressure hydrogen environment this study investigates the hydrogen embrittlement sensitivity of X70 welded pipe in a 10 MPa high-pressure hydrogen environment using slow strain rate testing (SSRT) and low-cycle fatigue (LCF) analysis. The microstructure slow tensile and fatigue fracture morphology of base metal (BM) and weld metal (WM) were characterized and analyzed by means of ultra-depth microscope scanning electron microscope (SEM) electron backscattering diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). Results indicate that while the high-pressure hydrogen environment has minimal impact on ultimate tensile strength (UTS) for both BM and WM it significantly decreases reduction of area (RA) and elongation (EL) with RA reduction in WM exceeding that in BM. Under the nitrogen environment the slow tensile fracture of X70 pipeline steel BM and WM is a typical ductile fracture while under the high-pressure hydrogen environment the unevenness of the slow tensile fracture increased and a large number of microcracks appeared on the fracture surface and edges with the fracture mode changing to ductile fracture + quasicleavage fracture. In addition the high-pressure hydrogen environment reduces the fatigue life of the BM and WM of X70 pipeline steel and the fatigue life of the WM decreases more than that of the BM as well. Compared to the nitrogen environment the fatigue fracture specimens of BM and WM in the hydrogen environment showed quasi-cleavage fracture patterns and the fracture area in the instantaneous fracture zone (IFZ) was significantly reduced. Compared with the BM of X70 pipeline steel although the effective grain size of the WM is smaller WM’s microstructure with larger Martensite/austenite (M/A) constituents and MnS and Al-rich oxides contributes to a heightened embrittlement sensitivity. In contrast the second-phase precipitation of nanosized Nb V and Ti composite carbon-nitride in the BM acts as an effective irreversible hydrogen trap which can significantly reduce the hydrogen embrittlement sensitivity
Recent Progress and Techno-economic Analysis of Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers for Australian Renewable Energy Export - A Critical Review
Jan 2024
Publication
Hydrogen as a primary carbon-free energy carrier is confronted by challenges in storage and transportation. However liquid organic hydrogen carriers (LOHCs) present a promising solution for storing and transporting hydrogen at ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure. Unlike circular energy carriers such as methanol ammonia and synthetic natural gas LOHCs do not produce by-products during hydrogen recovery. LOHCs only act as hydrogen carriers and the carriers can also be recycled for reuse. Although there are considerable advantages to LOHCs there are also some drawbacks especially relative to the energy consumption during the dehydrogenation step of the LOHC recycling. This review summarizes the recent progresses in LOHC technologies focusing on catalyst developments process and reactor designs applications and techno-economic assessments (TEA). LOHC technologies can potentially offer significant benefits to Australia especially in terms of hydrogen as an export commodity. LOHCs can help avoid capital costs associated with infrastructure such as transportation vessels while reducing hydrogen loss during transportation such as in the case of liquid hydrogen (LH2). Additionally it minimises CO2 emissions as observed in methane and methanol reforming. Thus it is essential to dedicate more efforts to explore and develop LOHC technologies in the Australian context.
Integration of Different Storage Technologies towards Sustainable Development—A Case Study in a Greek Island
Mar 2024
Publication
The necessity for transitioning to renewable energy sources and the intermittent nature of the natural variables lead to the integration of storage units into these projects. In this research paper wind turbines and solar modules are combined with pumped hydro storage batteries and green hydrogen. Energy management strategies are described for five different scenarios of hybrid renewable energy systems based on single or hybrid storage technologies. The motivation is driven by grid stability issues and the limited access to fresh water in the Greek islands. A RES-based desalination unit is introduced into the hybrid system for access to low-cost fresh water. The comparison of single and hybrid storage methods the exploitation of seawater for the simultaneous fulfillment of water for domestic and agricultural purposes and the evaluation of different energy economic and environmental indices are the innovative aspects of this research work. The results show that pumped hydro storage systems can cover the energy and water demand at the minimum possible price 0.215 EUR/kWh and 1.257 EUR/m3 while hybrid storage technologies provide better results in the loss of load probability payback period and CO2 emissions. For the pumped hydro– hydrogen hybrid storage system these values are 21.40% 10.87 years and 2297 tn/year respectively.
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