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Lessons Learned from HIAD 2.0: Inspection and Maintenance to Avoid Hydrogen-induced Material Failures

Abstract

Hydrogen has the potential to make countries energetically self-sufficient and independent in the long term. Nevertheless, its extreme combustion properties and its capability of permeating and embrittling most metallic materials produce significant safety concerns. The Hydrogen Incidents and Accidents Database 2.0 (HIAD 2.0) is a public repository that collects data on hydrogen-related undesired events mainly occurred in chemical and process industry. This study conducts an analysis of the HIAD 2.0 database, mining information systematically through a computer science approach known as Business Analytics. Moreover, several hydrogen-induced ma terial failures are investigated to understand their root causes. As a result, a deficiency in planning effective inspection and maintenance activities is highlighted as the common cause of the most severe accidents. The lessons learned from HIAD 2.0 could help to promote a safety culture, to improve the abnormal and normal events management and to stimulate a widespread rollout of hydrogen technologies.

Funding source: This work was undertaken as a part of the research projects “Sus tainability development and cost-reduction of hybrid renewable en ergies powered hydrogen stations by risk-based multidisciplinary approaches” (SUSHy) and “Safe hydrogen fuel handling and use for efficient implementation 2′′ (SH2IFT 2); the authors would like to acknowledge the financial support of the European Interest Group within the program EIG CONCERT-Japan (Grant No. 334340) and the Research Council of Norway (Grant No. 327009). The work of one author (A. Nakhal) is partly funded by INAIL (Italian National Institute for Insurance against Accidents at Work) – Department of Technological Innovations and Safety of Plants, Products and Anthropic Settlements, as part of the project “Resilience analysis for the evolution of industrial sociotechnical systems in critical or highly complex contexts”. The au thors kindly acknowledge the European Commission Joint Research Center for providing the information collected in HIAD 2.0. The continuous update and improvement of HIAD 2.0 is financially sup ported by the European public-private partnership “Clean Hydrogen Joint Undertaking”.
Related subjects: Safety
Countries: Italy ; Netherlands ; Norway
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/content/journal6827
2023-02-22
2025-04-07
/content/journal6827
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