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ICHS 4 San Francisco 12-14 2011. Safety Assessment of Unignited Hydrogen Discharge from Onboard Storage in Garages with Low Levels of Natural Ventilation. Síle Brennan , Vladimir Molkov. Hydrogen Safety Engineering and Research Centre (HySAFER). Outline. Motivation for the work
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ICHS 4 San Francisco 12-14 2011 Safety Assessment of Unignited Hydrogen Discharge from Onboard Storage in Garages with Low Levels of Natural Ventilation Síle Brennan, Vladimir Molkov Hydrogen Safety Engineering and Research Centre (HySAFER)
Outline • Motivation for the work • Pressure peaking • Description of the problem • Methodology • Results • Conclusions 12th September 2011
Motivation • Safety levels in H2technologies need to be at least the same as those in existing fossil fuel applications • Necessary to consider indoor use e.g. forklifts, vehicles, equipment in a garage etc. • Build on overlooked safety issue of “pressure peaking” to understand requirements for safe blow-down of on-board hydrogen storageindoors 12th September 2011
On-board H2 storage • H2 as compressed gas (350 - 700 bar) • Tanks equipped with pressure relief devices • Composite tanks rupture in < 6.5 min in fire • Current venting area of the PRD releases hydrogen quickly from the tank before its catastrophic failure • However, even if unignited, the release of hydrogen has been shown to result in unacceptable overpressures within the garage capable of destroying the structure 12th September 2011
Pressure peaking (1/3) Example • Release in 30.4 m3garage from 350 bar onboard storage • PRD with typical diameter of 5 mm • Steady mass flow rate release: 390 g/s of • Garage has single vent (area ~ 1 brick) • What is the overpressure in the garage? • Simple methods predict max 18 kPa 12th September 2011
Pressure peaking (2/3) Garage destroyed in seconds 12th September 2011 30.4 m3 garage, “brick” vent, mass flow rate 390 g/s (350 bar, 5 mm orifice)
Pressure peaking (3/3) H2 only! 10-20 kPa – safety limit for civil structures 12th September 2011 30.4 m3 garage, “brick” vent, mass flow rate 390 g/s (350 bar, 5 mm orifice)
Problem description (1/2) • Used phenomenological model to investigate releases indoors e.g. garage • Model based on a known volume, vent area and release rate • Characterise garage by Air Change per Hour (ACH) • Consider range of scenarios involving a release from onboard storage through a PRD in a vented garage 12th September 2011
Problem description (2/2) • Pressure: Onboard storage tanks @ 350 & 700 bar • Mass of H2: “Typical” inventories of 1, 5 and 13 kg • Garage volume:Free volumes in range 18-46 m3 • Ventilation: All natural ventilation, assume flow out: • ACH values(0.03 – 1) • Release parameters: the unignited hydrogen is released into the enclosure through PRDs with different areas 12th September 2011
Methodology • Step 1: Relate ACH to garage volume & vent size • Step 2: UU blown-down model to calculate dynamics of H2 mass flow rate from storage tankInput to phenomenological model • Step 3: For each scenario use phenomenological model to iteratively find PRD area such that: Pgarage< 20 kPa i.e. a “safe” level • Step 4:Find blow-down time, through PRD with “safe diameter” to tank over-pressures of 100, 50, 20, 1 & 0.1 bar 12th September 2011
ACH & Vent Size (1/2) • Air changes per hour (ACH) is a measure of how many times the air within a defined space (e.g. a garage) is replaced. • ACH = Qhr/VQhr = air flow rate (m3/hr), V = volume (m3) • Uncertainty in the literature in how to relate ACH to volume and vent area • Bernoulli: Qs= air flow rate (m3/s) A = vent area • C = coefficient of discharge = 0.6 • ∆P = pressure differential between garage & atmosphere 12th September 2011
ACH & Vent Size (2/2) • Bernoulli: • Fix volume and ACH > find Q (per hr & per s) • Fix ∆P to find vent area, A • BUT - what do we take as “∆P” ?? • 50 Pa commonly used in building applications “N50” • Bigger ∆Pused, smaller the vent for a given volume • Thus vent size and hence “peak-pressure” sensitive to ∆P chosen 12th September 2011
Effect of ∆P on Vent Area 12th September 2011
“Current” & “safe” PRD Pressure dynamics in 30m3 garage, ACH-0.18, 5 kg hydrogen @ 350 barsPRD diameters of 5 mm and 0.5 mm
Nomogram: 5 Kg H2 @ 350 bar Volume > ACH f(P) ACH > diameter diameter > time 12th September 2011
Nomogram: 5 Kg H2 @ 700 bar Volume > ACH f(P) ACH > diameter diameter > time 12th September 2011
Conclusions • Garages characterised by ACH and volume • Pressure-peaking model for unignited released used to calculate “safe” PRD diameters and corresponding blow-down time from on-board storage in vented enclosures • This phenomenon should be accounted for in indoor use of HFC systems and must be reflected in RCS. • Work raises questions about current approaches to fire resistance of onboard storage and PRD parameters • Further research is needed to develop safety strategies and engineering solutions. 12th September 2011
Thank you for your attention Any questions? sl.brennan@ulster.ac.uk 12th September 2011