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Title: Research for Hydrogen Safety,


1
Research for Hydrogen Safety, Codes Standards
Research for Hydrogen Safety, Codes Standards
An Integrated Approach
Antonio Ruiz U.S. Department of Energy Hydrogen
Program
International Conference on Hydrogen Safety San
Sebastián, Spain September 2007
2
POLICY CONTEXT Presidential Energy Initiatives
Addressing Challenges through Technology
Development
  • HYDROGEN FUEL INITIATIVE (January 2003)
  • 1.2 billion over five years
  • Establishes partnerships with private sector
  • Develops hydrogen, fuel cell and infrastructure
    technologies
  • Goal to make fuel cell vehicles practical and
    cost-effective by 2020

H F I

3
DOE HYDROGEN PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS
Office of Energy Efficiency Renewable
Energy Research, develop, and validate fuel cell
and H2 production, delivery, and storage
technologies for transportation and stationary
applications. Office of Fossil Energy Continue
studies for scaling up hydrogen membrane reactors
and CO2/H2 separation technologies for coal-based
hydrogen systems. Office of Nuclear
Energy Operate sulfur-iodine thermochemical and
high-temperature electrolysis experiments to
gather data on operability and reaction
rates. Office of Science Expand basic research
on nano-materials for storage, catalysis for fuel
cells, and bio-inspired and solar H2 production.
Increase emphasis on nano-structured design,
novel synthesis, and theory and modeling of the
physical and chemical interactions of hydrogen
with materials.
4
HYDROGEN FUEL INITIATIVE TOTAL FUNDING
  • President Bush committed 1.2 billion over 5
    years (FY04 FY08) to accelerate RD to enable
    technology readiness in 2015.
  • Presidents cumulative request of 1.267 B (for
    FY04 FY08) has been consistent with the
    original commitment of 1.2 B.
  • Congress has been supportive Appropriations of
    885M for FY04 FY07.

1 Includes EERE, FE, NE, SC and Department of
Transportation
5
DOE HYDROGEN PROGRAM BUDGET by Office
Does not include Department of Transportation
6
HYDROGEN PROGRAM MISSIONReduce Oil Consumption
and GHG Emissions
The Hydrogen Program mission is to research,
develop, and validate hydrogen production,
storage, and fuel cell technologies to reduce
dependence on oil in the transportation sector,
and to enable clean, reliable energy for
stationary and portable power generation.
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions
U.S. Oil Consumption
GOAL
GOAL
7
HYDROGEN PROGRAM SPENDING A balanced, diverse
portfolio
8
HYDROGEN PROGRAM STRUCTURE
Research is at the core of the DOE H2 Program
Funds basic research, applied research and
development, and learning demonstrations to
advance and validate hydrogen and fuel cell
technologies.
TECHNOLOGY RD and VALIDATION
Ensures safe practices within the Program and
disseminates safety information to the industry.
Safety
Works with established national organizations to
lay the groundwork for technically sound codes
standards.
Codes Standards
Enables understanding and assessment of
technology needs and progress supports program
decision-making, planning, and budgeting.
Sytems Integration/Analysis
Overcomes knowledge barriers, by conducting
outreach and providing information for training
programs.
Education
9
SAFETY, CODES STANDARDS PROGRAM GOALS
  • To develop and implement practices and procedures
    that will ensure safety in the operation,
    handling, and use of hydrogen and hydrogen
    systems for all DOE funded projects.
  • To perform the underlying research to enable
    codes and standards to be developed for the safe
    use of hydrogen in all applications.
  • And to facilitate the development and
    harmonization of domestic and international codes
    and standards.

10
SAFETY, CODES STANDARDS BUDGET Fiscal Year 2007
Total 13.8 million
11
Challenges
  • Limited historical data / insufficient technical
    and performance data to develop and revise
    standards
  • Large number of Authorities Having Jurisdiction
  • Lack of uniform training of officials
  • Lack of standard practices for safety assessments
  • Lack of integrated, coordinated approach among
    CS Organizations
  • Lack of harmonization of domestic and
    international standards
  • Limited government influence on CS process
  • Limited DOE role in international CS development
    process

12
RESEARCH NEEDS ARE IDENTIFIED IN COOPERATION WITH
INDUSTRY
Roadmap detailing information gaps for the
following target areas ensures RDD efforts are
properly directed.
  • Hydrogen Behavior (physical/chemical,
    combustion/flammability, materials properties,
    sensing/mitigation)
  • Vehicles(fuel storage system, components,
    sensors, whole vehicle, failure modes)
  • Infrastructure(production, terminals/distribution
    /delivery, refueling stations)
  • Interface(fuel quality, feedback strategies,
    refueling components)

13
MATERIALS COMPATIBILITY TESTING
  • TWO OBJECTIVES
  • Generate benchmark H2 cracking thresholds for
    low-alloy steels currently in codes for seamless
    pressure vessels
  • Establish best procedures for testing in H2

Version 1.0 of Technical Reference for H2
Compatibility of Materials Complete www.ca.sandia.
gov/matlsTechRef
  • Increased material strength lowers threshold for
    H2-assisted crack growth
  • Increased H2 gas pressure lowers threshold for
    H2-assisted crack growth

first data points in 30 years at PH2gt100 MPa
H2 compatibility of 316 stainless steel can be
optimized by controlling composition,
particularly nickel content. Carbon content seems
to be less important
ASME SA-372 Grade J steel is relatively resistant
to hydrogen-assisted fracture at high-pressure
14
HYDROGEN BEHAVIOR
Flame Characterization
Experimentally Measure Heat Flux
Impinging jet, 10 ft impingement diameter
Thermal Radiation Models
C(x/L) 4 p R 2 qrad(x/L) / Srad
Flammability Limits and Ignition Probabilities
15
HYDROGEN JET AND FLAME BEHAVIORH2 jets and
flames are similar to other flammable gases
  • Fraction of chemical energy converted to thermal
    radiation
  • Radiation heat flux distribution
  • Jet length

16
BARRIER WALLS AS A MITIGATION STRATEGY
  • Goal determine if barriers are an effective jet
    mitigation technique since mixtures of H2 and air
    can ignite and potentially generate large
    overpressures.
  • Contributing member of the HYPER project in
    Europe.

Over-pressure characterization
  • Characterize H2 transport and mixing near barrier
    walls through combined experiment and modeling
  • Identify conditions leading to deflagration or
    detonation
  • residence time and ignition timing
  • magnitude of over-pressure and duration
  • Develop correlations for wall heights dependency
    and wall-standoff distances

17
H2 JET BEHAVIOR NEAR BARRIER WALLS
  • Characterize stabilization of H2 jet flame on and
    behind barrier
  • Characterize thermal/structural integrity of
    barriers
  • Use CFD modeling and validation for H2 jet flames
    to minimize the number of tests
  • Develop correlations for wall height dependencies
    and wall stand-off distances
  • Combine data and analysis with quantitative risk
    assessment for barrier configuration guidance

Barlow flame A (ref. Combustion and Flame, v.
117, pp. 4-31, 1999)
18
QUANTITATIVE RISK ASSESSMENT A Traceable
Technical Basis for Code Development
Sample architecture from NREL H2 Station Simulator
  • Quantitative risk assessment (QRA) provides a
    framework for making risk-informed decisions.
  • We are applying QRA to help define refueling
    setbacks.
  • Likelihood of events is estimated from component
    reliability and architecture-based FMEA studies.
  • Event consequences are quantified using
    engineering models from the research program and
    published data.
  • Consequences are integrated and evaluated
    relative to acceptable risk metrics.
  • Site-specific mitigation strategies should be
    identified where appropriate.

19
USING QRA TO CONSIDER SEPARATION DISTANCES FOR H2
FACILITIES
  • Current code separation distances are not
    reflective of future fueling station operations
    (e.g., 70 MPa)
  • Facility parameters (e.g., operating pressure and
    volume) should be used to delineate separation
    distances
  • Consequence-based separation distances (i.e.,
    single event) can be large depending on pressure,
    leak size, and consequence parameter
  • QRA insights are being considered by NFPA-2 to
    help establish meaningful separation distances
    and other code requirements

Leak Diameter (mm)
Consequence Parameter
20
QRA Towards a Risk-informed Code Development
Framework
  • Quantitative Risk Assessment (QRA) provides code
    developers with risk insights to help define
    codes and standards requirements
  • requires quantification of consequences from of
    all possible accidents
  • requires definition of event frequencies
  • requires definition of acceptable risk levels and
    metrics
  • Accounts for parameter and modeling uncertainty
    present in analysis evaluates importance of risk
    assumptions through sensitivity analysis

example
Risk Frequency x Consequence
21
HIGH-PRESSURE (70MPa) REFUELING
  • 25 Fueling Trials at Powertech with 4 individual
    tanks (not system type 3 and type 4 tanks used
    ranging from 34 to 130 L)
  • Evaluated SAE J2601 targets regarding fill
    density/time changes between different fueling
    methods w/ and w/out pre-cooling communications
  • Preliminary Results Precooling is needed to
    achieve fueling in a short amount of time, in
    some cases also communications
  • Results were used to formulate the follow-on work

22
HIGH-PRESSURE REFUELING AT THE SYSTEM LEVEL
2007 Government/Industry 70MPa Multi-Client Study
  • Purpose accelerate progress of informed
    standards for hydrogen vehicle fueling utilizing
    real vehicle and station hardware
  • Why? Not enough information currently available
    for standards organizations on fueling protocol
    and station hardware
  • OEMs to bring their onboard storage systems to
    third party organizations (Powertech JARI) also
    as in-kind contribution to the project
  • Participants DCX, Ford, GM, Honda, Nissan,
    Toyota
  • Funding Energy Companies Government
  • Air Liquide, BP, Linde, Nippon Oil, Sandia (DOE),
    Shell
  • Modeling effort at Sandia for on-board storage
    and hydrogen station dispensing

23
FUEL QUALITY Relative Tradeoffs Identified
  • To date, the North American industry-government
    team has identified the following as critical
    constituents around which near-term RD and
    testing should be focused
  • CO
  • S compounds
  • He
  • CH4 and inerts
  • NH3
  • Particulate Matter (lt10µ
  • diameter)
  • This list may change and other critical
    constituents may be identified as RD and testing
    proceed

CRITICAL CONSTITUENTS
SPECIFICATION TRADEOFFS
Sulfur species
Ammonia
Carbon Monoxide
Aromatic Aliphatic HCs
Low High
Impact on Fuel Cell
Oxygen
Methane
Carbon Dioxide
Nitrogen
Helium
Low High
Difficulty to Attain and Verify Level
Source Shell Hydrogen
24
SUMMARY OF FUEL QUALITY PROGRESS
  • Consensus national and international fuel quality
    guidelines available
  • ISO Technical Specification (TS 14687-2) approved
    and in press
  • ISO TS and SAE J2719 are nearly identical
  • Significant progress on RD/testing to obtain
    data needed to convert guidelines into standards
  • Test protocol, test matrix, data reporting format
    adopted
  • Testing underway at LANL, HNEI
  • FQ solicitation winners integrated into overall
    effort
  • International collaboration underway
  • Modeling subgroup formed
  • International and national standards under
    preparation
  • Committee draft for ISO standard
  • Updating of SAE J2719

25
OBSTACLES TO LINKING RD AND CODES STANDARDS
DEVELOPMENT
  • Different timetables
  • Codes and standards development process has set
    timetables and deadlines for public notice,
    public hearings/comment, publication
  • RD does not (cannot) follow a set timetable
  • Different purposes and perspectives
  • RD addresses scientific problems, e.g., hydrogen
    behavior under given release, confinement,
    ignition conditions
  • CS development requires interpretation of
    scientific findings to help set requirements that
    improve safety of general class of applications,
    uses, situations
  • Long-term interaction between researchers and CS
    technical committee members essential
  • Cannot be limited to one-time presentations,
    testimony
  • Researchers must be integrated into technical
    committees
  • CS technical committee members must become
    familiar with RD objectives, process,
    limitations (uncertainty, error bars)

26
DEVELOPMENT OF CODES, STANDARDS, AND REGULATIONS
2015
2004
2010
Research
RD Roadmap
Domestic Codes Standards
Standards
National Template
Codes
Global Technical Regulations (GTR)
IEC, ISO
GRPE
International Coordination
GTR
27
Regulators Guide to Permitting Hydrogen
Technologies
Objective Help code officials sort through
applicable codes and standards when permitting
hydrogen facilities.
  • Content Covers stationary fuel cells for
  • commercial buildings and hydrogen motor
  • fuel dispensing facilities and includes
  • Hydrogen's use as a fuel
  • The regulatory process
  • Relevant codes and standards
  • Partners
  • National Fire Protection Association
  • International Code Council
  • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • National Renewable Energy Laboratory
  • 1 Foundation and Protection
  • 2 Fire Protection Systems
  • 3 Piping Components and Connections
  • 4 Ventilation, Exhaust, and Makeup Air
  • 5 Siting, Installation, and Protection
  • 6 Fuel Supply and Storage
  • 7 Interconnections

Typical installation requirements for a fuel cell
in a commercial building
Module 1 - Permitting Stationary Fuel Cell
Installations Module 2 - Permitting Hydrogen
Motor Fuel Dispensing Facilities
www.eere.energy.gov/hydrogenandfuelcells/codes/per
mitting_guides.html
28
www.fuelcellstandards.com
  • Web site maintains
  • The status of all fuel cell codes and standards
    activities
  • Calendar of meetings and other significant dates
  • Bulletin board for posting questions and answers

29
Permitting HFS DOE Initiative
  • Information Toolkit
  • Fact sheet(s)
  • basic information on HFS (examples,
    codes/standards typically used, information
    sources)
  • Network chart
  • contact list of code officials whose
    jurisdictions have issued permits for HFS
  • Flowchart of permitting requirements
  • web-based map to navigate requirements with
    database of key standards and codes
  • HFS Permitting Compendium
  • web-based notebook and database
  • Education-outreach workshops for code officials
  • National workshops with NASFM, NCSBCS
  • vet case studies, CS permitting process,
    information tools
  • Workshops in key regions
  • locations where industry will focus H2
    infrastructure development and vehicle deployment

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Remaining Challenges
  • Open Issues/Remaining Barriers
  • Difficult permitting process for retail hydrogen
    facilities
  • Delayed adoption of approved codes and standards
  • Synchronizing codes and standards development and
    adoption with technology commercialization needs
  • Future Research Direction
  • QRA Identify necessary event frequency, define
    maintenance protocols, secure frequency data
  • Fuel Quality Continue collaborative
    international RD testing effort.
  • 70MPa Complete expanded cross-industry test
    program, demonstration project data needed
  • Materials Compatibility Expand on the completed
    initial materials set -initiate investigation of
    composite and other materials
  • Provide technical support/ guidance to local code
    officials to facilitate permitting of retail
    hydrogen facilities

35
ONLINE INFORMATION TOOLS
  • H2 INCIDENTS DATABASE
  • Information on hydrogen incidents and lessons
    learned
  • Over 100 incidents documented
  • BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATABASE
  • Contains 400 documents related to hydrogen
    safety
  • Will contain 650 by end of FY 2007

www.h2incidents.org
www.hydrogen.energy.gov
Hydrogen Safety Best Practices Manual Under
Development Dec. 2007
36
FOR MORE INFORMATION
www.hydrogen.energy.gov
Antonio Ruiz antonio.ruiz_at_ee.doe.gov 1
202-586-0729
37
ESKERRIK ASKO
THANK YOU
GRACIAS
???????
MERCI
GRÀCIES
?????
OBRIGADO
??
DANKE
??????S??
???????????
GRAZIE
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