Safety
Safety of Laboratories for New Hydrogen Techniques
Sep 2007
Publication
In this paper a case of hydrogen release in a typical research laboratory for the characterisation of hydrogen solid-state storage materials has been considered. The laboratory is equipped with various testing equipments for the assessment of hydrogen capacity in materials typically in the 1 to 200 bar pressure range and temperatures up to 500°C. Hydrogen is delivered at 200 bar by a 50 l gas bottle and a compressor located outside the laboratory. The safety measures directly related to hydrogen hazard consist in a distributed ventilation of the laboratory and air extraction fume hoods located on top of each instrument. Goal of this work is the modelling of hydrogen accidental release in a real laboratory case in order to provide a more fundamental basis for the laboratory safety design and assist the decision on the number and position of the safety sensors. The computational fluid dynamics code (CFD) ANSYS-CFX has been selected in order to perform the numerical investigations. Two basic accidental release scenarios have been assumed both at 200 bar: a major leak corresponding to a guillotine breaking of the hydrogen distribution line and a smaller leak typical for a not properly tight junction.
Overview of the New Combined Gasoline/Hydrogen Supply Station and Relevant Regulations in Japan
Sep 2007
Publication
When a hydrogen supply station is to be installed in Japan three fundamental laws must be taken into consideration: the High Pressure Gas Safety Law the Building Standards Law and the Fire Service Law. The High Pressure Gas Safety Law in particular regulates procedures for safety concerning hydrogen supply stations. This law came under review accompanying consideration of the potential utilization of fuel cell vehicles and hydrogen stations. At that time the Japan Petroleum Energy Center (JPEC) investigated safety technology for hydrogen supply stations and prepared a draft of the law. Since then a new combined gasoline/hydrogen supply station compliant with the revised law was established on December 2006. There are a large number of safety precautions incorporated into this station model which conform to the law. As a result of these modifications it was possible to reduce the safe setback distance. In this paper we present an overview of the new hydrogen supply station model the safety precautions and the regulations the station is based on.
Hytunnel Project to Investigate the Use of Hydrogen Vehicles in Road Tunnels
Sep 2009
Publication
Hydrogen vehicles may emerge as a leading contender to replace today’s internal combustion engine powered vehicles. A Phenomena Identification and Ranking Table exercise conducted as part of the European Network of Excellence on Hydrogen Safety (HySafe) identified the use of hydrogen vehicles in road tunnels as a topic of important concern. An internal project called HyTunnel was duly established within HySafe to review identify and analyse the issues involved and to contribute to the wider activity to establish the true nature of the hazards posed by hydrogen vehicles in the confined space of a tunnel and their relative severity compared to those posed by vehicles powered by conventional fuels including compressed natural gas (CNG). In addition to reviewing current hydrogen vehicle designs tunnel design practice and previous research a programme of experiments and CFD modelling activities was performed for selected scenarios to examine the dispersion and explosion hazards potentially posed by hydrogen vehicles. Releases from compressed gaseous hydrogen (CGH2) and liquid hydrogen (LH2) powered vehicles have been studied under various tunnel geometries and ventilation regimes. The findings drawn from the limited work done so far indicate that under normal circumstances hydrogen powered vehicles do not pose a significantly higher risk than those powered by petrol diesel or CNG but this needs to be confirmed by further research. In particular obstructions at tunnel ceiling level have been identified as a potential hazard in respect to fast deflagration or even detonation in some circumstances which warrants further investigation. The shape of the tunnel tunnel ventilation and vehicle pressure relief device (PRD) operation are potentially important parameters in determining explosion risks and the appropriate mitigation measures.
A GIS-based Risk Assessment for Hydrogen Transport: A Case Study in Yokohama City
Sep 2019
Publication
Risk assessment of hazardous material transport by road is critical in considering the spatial features of the transport route. However previous studies that focused on hydrogen transport were unable to reflect the spatial features in their risk assessments. Hence this study aims to assess the risk of hydrogen transport by road considering the spatial features of the transport route based on a geographic information system (GIS). This risk assessment method is conducted through a case study in Yokohama which is an advanced city for hydrogen economy in Japan. In our assessment the risk determined by multiplying the frequency of accidents with the consequence was estimated by road segments that constitute the entire transport route. The effects of the road structure and traffic volumes were reflected in the estimation of the frequency and consequence for each road segment. All estimations of frequency consequence and risk were conducted on a GIS compiled with the information regarding the road network and population. In the case study in Yokohama the route for the transport of compressed hydrogen was virtually set from the near-term perspectives. Based on the case study results the risks of the target transport route were assessed at an acceptable level under the previous risk criteria. The results indicated that the risks fluctuated according to the road segments. This implies that the spatial features of the transport route significantly affect the corresponding risks. This finding corroborates the importance of considering spatial features in the risk assessment of hydrogen transport by road. Furthermore the discussion of this importance leads to the capability of introducing hydrogen energy careers with high transport efficiency and transport routing to avoid high risk road segments as risk countermeasures.
Experimental Study on Hydrogen/Air Premixed Flame Propagation in Closed Rectangular Channels
Sep 2019
Publication
An experimental study of hydrogen/air premixed flame propagation in a closed rectangular channel with the inhibitions (N2 or CO2) was conducted to investigate the inhibiting effect of N2 and CO2 on the flame properties during its propagation. Both Schlieren system and the pressure sensor were used to capture the evolution of flame shape and pressure changes in the channel. It was found that both N2 and CO2 have considerable inhibiting effect on hydrogen/air premixed flames. Compared with N2 CO2 has more prominent inhibition which has been interpreted from thermal and kinetic standpoints. In all the flames the classic tulip shape was observed. With different inhibitor concentration the flame demonstrated three types of deformation after the classic tulip inversion. A simple theoretical analysis has also been conducted to indicate that the pressure wave generated upon the first flame-wall contact can affect the flame deformation depending on its meeting moment with the flame front. Most importantly the meeting moment is always behind the start of tulip inversion which suggests the non-dominant role of pressure wave on this featured phenomenon.
H-Mat Hydrogen Compatibility of Polymers and Elastomers
Sep 2019
Publication
The H2@Scale program of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Fuel Cell Technologies Office is supporting work on the hydrogen compatibility of polymers to improve the durability and reliability of materials for hydrogen infrastructure. The hydrogen compatibility program (H-Mat) seeks “to address the challenges of hydrogen degradation by elucidating the mechanisms of hydrogen-materials interactions with the goal of providing science-based strategies to design materials (micro)structures and morphology with improved resistance to hydrogen degradation.” This research has found hydrogen and pressure interactions with model rubber-material compounds demonstrating volume change and compression-set differences in the materials. The research leverages state-of-the-art capabilities of the DOE national labs. The materials were investigated using helium-ion microscopy which revealed significant morphological changes in the plasticizer incorporating compounds after exposure as evidenced by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Additional studies using transmission electron microscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance revealed that nanosized inclusions developed after gas decompression in rubber- and plasticizer-only materials; this is an indication of void formation at the nanometer level.
Introductory Course on Hydrogen Safety at CENEH-UNICAMP
Sep 2013
Publication
The course is an introduction to the procedures for safe handling of hydrogen flammable and toxic gases by small users working in the field of hydrogen and fuel cells. Theoretical and practical aspects are emphasized aiming at identifying the main hazards and reduce the risks associated with the use of these gases. Topics: 1. Market hydrogen production fuel cells and energy storage; 2. International System of Units Comparison between the ideal gas and real gases; 3. Safety of gases and hydrogen; 4. Cylinders fittings and valves for gases and hydrogen; 5. Purge of gases; 6. Infrastructure for gases and hydrogen; 7. Accidents with hydrogen.
Effect of Microstructural and Environmental Variables on Ductility of Austenitic Stainless Steels
Sep 2019
Publication
Austenitic stainless steels are used extensively in harsh environments including for high-pressure gaseous hydrogen service. However the tensile ductility of this class of materials is very sensitive to materials and environmental variables. While tensile ductility is generally insufficient to qualify a material for hydrogen service ductility is an effective tool to explore microstructural and environmental variables and their effects on hydrogen susceptibility to inform understanding of the mechanisms of hydrogen effects in metals and to provide insight to microstructural variables that may improve relative performance. In this study hydrogen precharging was used to simulate high-pressure hydrogen environments to evaluate hydrogen effects on tensile properties. Several austenitic stainless steels were considered including both metastable and stable alloys. Room temperature and subambient temperature tensile properties were evaluated with three different internal hydrogen contents for type 304L and 316L austenitic stainless steels and one hydrogen content for XM-11. Significant ductility loss was observed for both metastable and stable alloys suggesting the stability of the austenitic phase is not sufficient to characterize the effects of hydrogen. Internal hydrogen does influence the character of deformation which drives local damage accumulation and ultimately fracture for both metastable and stable alloys. While a quantitative description of hydrogen-assisted fracture in austenitic stainless steels remains elusive these observations underscore the importance of the hydrogen-defect interactions and the accumulation of damage at deformation length scales.
Hydrogen Storage: Recent Improvements and Industrial Perspectives
Sep 2019
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.
Numerical Investigation of Detonation in Stratified Combustible Mixture and Oxidizer with Concentration Gradients
Sep 2019
Publication
Hydrogen leakage in a closed space is one of the causes of serious accidents because of its high detonability. Assuming the situation that hydrogen is accumulated in a closed space two-dimensional numerical simulation for hydrogen oxygen detonation which propagates in stratified fuel and oxidizer with concentration gradient is conducted by using detailed chemical reaction model. The concentration gradient between fuel and oxidizer is expressed by changing the number of hydrogen moles by using sigmoid function. Strength of discontinuity at the boundary is controlled by changing the gain of the function. The maximum pressure history shows that the behaviour of triple points is different depending on the strength of discontinuity between the two kind of gas. In without concentration gradient case the transverse waves are reflected at the boundary because of the sudden change of acoustic impedance ratio between two kind of gas. In contrast in with concentration gradient case the transverse wavs are not reflected in the buffer zone and they are flowed into the oxidizer as its structures are kept. As a result the confined effect declines as the strength of discontinuity between the two kind of gas is weakened and the propagating distance of detonation changes
Analysis of Transient Hydrogen Release, Dispersion and Explosion in a Tunnel with Fuel Cell Vehicles using All-Speed CFD Code
Sep 2019
Publication
Hydrogen energy is expanding world wide in recent years while hydrogen safety issues have drawn considerable attention. It is widely accepted that accidental hydrogen release in an open air environment will disperse quickly hence not causing significant hydrogen hazards. A hydrogen hazard is more likely to occur when hydrogen is accidentally released in a confined place i.e. parking garages and tunnels. Prediction the consequences of hydrogen detonation is important for hydrogen safety assessment and for ensuring the safety of installations during accidents. Hence an accident scenario of hydrogen release nd detonation in a tunnel is analysed with GASFLOW-MPI in this paper. GASFLOW-MPI is a well validated parallel CFD code focusing on hydrogen transport combustion and detonation. GASFLOWMPI solves compressible Navier-Stokes equations with a powerful all-speed Arbitrary-Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE) method hence it can cover both the non-compressible flow during the hydrogen relesase and dispersion phases and the compressible flow during combustion and detonation. A 3D model of a tunnel including eight cars is modelled. Firstly the hydrogen dispersion in the tunnel is calculated. Then the detonation in the tunnel is calculated by manually igniting the hydrogen at the top of the tunnel when the λ criterion is maximum. The pressure loads are calculated to evaluate the consequence of the hazard.
CFD Validation Against Large Scale Liquified Helium Release
Sep 2019
Publication
The ADREA-HF CFD code is validated against a large scale liquefied helium release experiment on flat ground performed by INERIS in the past. The predicted release and dispersion behavior is evaluated against the experimental using temperature time histories at sensors deployed at various distances and heights downstream the source. For the selected sensors the temperature predictions are generally in good agreement with the experimental with a tendency to under-predict temperature as the source is approached.
Determination of Distribution Function Used in Monte Carlo Simulation on Safety Analysis of Hydrogen Vessels
Sep 2019
Publication
The test data of static burst strength and load cycle strength of composite pressure vessels are often described by GAUSSian normal or WEIBULL distribution function to perform safety analyses. The goodness of assumed distribution function plays a significant role in the inferential statistics to predict the population properties by using limited test data. Often GAUSSian and WEIBULL probability nets are empirical methods used to validate the distribution function; Anderson-Darling and Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests are the mostly favorable approaches for Goodness of Fit. However the different approaches used to determine the parameters of distribution function lead mostly to different conclusions for safety assessments.<br/>In this study six different methods are investigated to show the variations on the rates for accepting the composite pressure vessels according to GTR No. 13 life test procedure. The six methods are: a) Norm- Log based method b) Least squares regression c) Weighted least squares regression d) A linear approach based on good linear unbiased estimators e) Maximum likelihood estimation and f) The method of moments estimation. In addition various approaches of ranking function are considered. In the study Monte Carlo simulations are conducted to generate basic populations based on the distribution functions which are determined using different methods. Then the samples are extracted randomly from a population and evaluated to obtain acceptance rate. Here the “populations” and “samples” are corresponding to the burst strength or load cycle strength of the pressure vessels made from composite material and a plastic liner (type 4) for the storage of hydrogen. To the end the results are discussed and the best reliable methods are proposed.
Evaluation of the ADREA-HF CFD Code Against a Hydrogen Deflagration in a Tunnel
Sep 2013
Publication
In the present work the capabilities of the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code ADREA-HF to predict deflagration in homogenous near stoichiometric hydrogen-air mixture in a model of a tunnel were tested. The tunnel is 78.5 m long. Hydrogen-air mixture is located in a 10 m long region in the middle of the tunnel. Two cases are studied: one with a complete empty tunnel and one with the presence of four vehicles near the center of the tunnel. The combustion model is based on the turbulent flame speed concept. The turbulent flame speed is a modification of Yakhot's equation in order to account for additional physical mechanisms. A sensitivity analysis for the parameter of the combustion model and for the mesh resolution was made for the empty tunnel case. The agreement between experimental and computational results concerning the value of the maximum pressure and the time it appears is satisfactory in both cases. The sensitivity analysis for the parameter of the combustion model showed that even small changes in it can have impact on the simulating results whereas the sensitivity analysis of the mesh resolution did not reveal any significant differences.
Tests of the Vehicle’s Powertrain with Hydrogen Fuel Cells at a Low Temperature
Sep 2019
Publication
The article discusses issues related to the operation of fuel cells stack fed with hydrogen at low temperature. The test object was a Toyota Mirai passenger car equipped with this type of powertrain. Tests were carried out in a thermoclimatic chamber at the Cracow University of Technology. They had an initial character and their aim was to evaluate the work of individual subassemblies of the propulsion system including the hydrogen supply system in terms of operational safety.
Numerical Simulation of Homogenous/Inhomogeneous Hydrogen-air Explosion in a Rectangular Channel
Sep 2019
Publication
Hydrogen is one of the promising energy sources in the future because it has the advantages of clean combustion products high efficiency and renewable energy. However hydrogen has the characteristics of low ignition energy wide flammable range (4% -75%) and fast burning flame speed which can cause explosion hazards. Typically the accidental release of hydrogen into confined or semi confined enclosures can often lead to a flammable hydrogen-air mixture with concentration gradients and possible flame acceleration and deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT). The present study aims to test the capability of our in-house density-based solver ExplosionEngFoam for flame acceleration (FA) and deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT) in homogenous/inhomogeneous hydrogen-air mixtures. The solver is based on the open source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) platform OpenFOAM and uses the modified Weller et al.’s combustion model taking into account LD and RT instabilities turbulence and non-unity Lewis number etc. Numerical simulations were conducted for both homogeneous and inhomogeneous mixtures in a long enclosed channel with 5.4 m in length and 0.06 m in height. The predictions demonstrate good quantitative agreement with the experimental measurements in flame tip position speed and pressure profiles by Boeck et al. The flow characteristics such as flame fine structure wave evolution etc. were also discussed.
Hydrogen-assisted Cracking of GMA Welded 960 & A Grade High-strength Steels
Jan 2020
Publication
High-strength steels with yield strength of 960 MPa are susceptible to hydrogen-assisted cracking (HAC) during welding processing. In the present paper the implant test is used to study HAC in a quenched and tempered steel S960QL and a high-strength steel produced by thermo-mechanical controlled process S960MC. Welding is performed using the gas-metal arc welding process. Furthermore diffusible hydrogen concentration (HD) in arc weld metal is determined. Based on the implant test results lower critical stress (LCS) for complete fracture critical implant stress (σkrit) for crack initiation and embrittlement index (EI) are determined. At HD of 1.66 ml/100 g LCS is 605 MPa and 817 MPa for S960QL and S960MC respectively. EI is 0.30 and 0.46 for S960QL and S960MC respectively. Fracture surfaces of S960QL show higher degradation with reduced deformation. Both higher EI of S960MC and fractography show better resistance to HAC in the HAZ of S960MC compared to S960QL.
Ignited Releases of Liquid Hydrogen: Safety Considerations of Thermal and Overpressure Effects
Sep 2013
Publication
If the ‘Hydrogen Economy’ is to progress more hydrogen fuelling stations are required. In the short term and in the absence of a hydrogen distribution network these fuelling stations will have to be supplied by liquid hydrogen (LH2) road tankers. Such a development will increase the number of tanker offloading operations significantly and these may need to be performed in close proximity to the general public. LH2 was first investigated experimentally as large-scale spills of LH2 at a rate of 60 litres per minute. Measurements were made on un-ignited releases which included the concentration of hydrogen in air thermal gradients in the concrete substrate liquid pool formation and temperatures within the pool. Computational modelling on the un-ignited spills was also performed. The experimental work on ignited releases of LH2 detailed in this paper is a continuation of the work performed by Royle and Willoughby. The experimental findings presented are split into three phenomena; jet-fires in high and low wind conditions ‘burn-back’ of ignited clouds and secondary explosions post ‘burn-back’. The aim of this work was to determine the hazards and severity of a realistic ignited spill of LH2 focussing on; flammability limits of an LH2 vapour cloud flame speeds through an LH2 vapour cloud and subsequent radiative heat levels after ignition. An attempt was made to estimate the magnitude of an explosion that occurred during one of the releases. The results of these experiments will inform the wider hydrogen community and contribute to the development of more robust modelling tools. The resulting data were used to propose safety distances for LH2 offloading facilities which will help to update and develop guidance for codes and standards.
Early Community Engagement with Hydrogen in Australia
Sep 2019
Publication
Community support and acceptance is part of the licence to operate for any industry. The hydrogen industry is no different and we will need to have strong support from the broad community to establish a viable hydrogen economy in Australia.<br/>As Woodside progresses our plans for bulk hydrogen export and associated domestic opportunities stakeholder engagement throughout will be critical to success. This talk will share Woodside’s approach to community engagement and local opportunities and how we plan to draw on more than 30 years’ experience operating liquefied natural gas plants in Western Australia’s Pilbara region.<br/>At this early stage of our hydrogen work we are beginning with the end in mind: engaging the customer. We’ve worked with local Australian businesses to help raise public awareness and interest in hydrogen by producing prototype consumer products. We will share experiences from this work that underscore the value of early engagement with all stakeholders: government regulators industrial and community neighbours and end consumers to enable the hydrogen economy vision for Australia. This paper will present information on community engagement and acceptance of hydrogen in Australia.<br/>This information has come from Woodside Energy Ltd by engaging with small businesses government regulators and the community at large. As we establish community acceptance for hydrogen as an energy carrier in Australia Woodside has been working in parallel to have standards and regulations established for hydrogen in Australia. Through our work with Hydrogen Mobility Australia we are advocating the adoption of ISO standards unless there is a specific geographic or health safety and environment reason not to.
The CALIF3S-P2remics Software – An Application to Underexpanded Hydrogen Jet Deflagration
Sep 2019
Publication
To assess explosion hazard the French Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN) is developing the P2REMICS software (for Partially PREMIxed Combustion Solver) on the basis of the generic CFD solver library CALIF3S (for Components Adaptive Library for Fluid Flow Simulation). Both P2REMICS and CALIF3S are in-house IRSN softwares released under an open-source license. CALIF3S-P2REMICS is dedicated to the simulation of explosion scenarii (explosive atmosphere formation deflagration or detonation and blast waves propagation) for hydrogen as more generally for any explosive gas or gas/dust mixture. It is based on staggered space discretizations and implements fractional-steps time algorithms well suited for massively parallel computations. A wide range of experiments is used for the software validation. Among them we focus here on a free underexpanded hydrogen jet deflagration performed in two steps: first the hydrogen is released in air up to obtain a steady jet (dispersion phase) then the deflagration is triggered. For the dispersion phase simulation a notional nozzle approach is used to get rid of the description of the shocked zone located near the nozzle. Then a so-called turbulent flame velocity approach is chosen for the deflagration simulation. The computations allow to highlight the complex flow structures induced by the inhomogeneity fuel concentration in the jet. A large dispersion of results is observed depending on the chosen correlation for the turbulent flame speed.
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