Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage

Accidental hydrogen releases from pipelines pose significant risks, particularly with the expanding deployment of hydrogen infrastructure. Despite this, there has been a lack of thorough investigation into hydrogen leakage from pipelines, especially under complex real-world conditions. This study ad...

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Main Authors: Yujie Lin, Xiaodong Ling, Anfeng Yu, Yi Liu, Di Liu, Yazhen Wang, Qian Wu, Yuan Lu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-12-01
Series:Fire
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/7/1/8
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author Yujie Lin
Xiaodong Ling
Anfeng Yu
Yi Liu
Di Liu
Yazhen Wang
Qian Wu
Yuan Lu
author_facet Yujie Lin
Xiaodong Ling
Anfeng Yu
Yi Liu
Di Liu
Yazhen Wang
Qian Wu
Yuan Lu
author_sort Yujie Lin
collection DOAJ
description Accidental hydrogen releases from pipelines pose significant risks, particularly with the expanding deployment of hydrogen infrastructure. Despite this, there has been a lack of thorough investigation into hydrogen leakage from pipelines, especially under complex real-world conditions. This study addresses this gap by modeling hydrogen gas dispersion, jet fires, and explosions based on practical scenarios. Various factors influencing accident consequences, such as leak hole size, wind speed, wind direction, and trench presence, were systematically examined. The findings reveal that both hydrogen dispersion distance and jet flame thermal radiation distance increase with leak hole size and wind speed. Specifically, the longest dispersion and radiation distances occur when the wind direction aligns with the trench, which is 110 m where the hydrogen concentration is 4% and 76 m where the radiation is 15.8 kW/m<sup>2</sup> in the case of a 325 mm leak hole and wind under 10 m/s. Meanwhile, pipelines lacking trenching exhibit the shortest distances, 0.17 m and 0.98 m, at a hydrogen concentration of 4% and 15.8 kW/m<sup>2</sup> radiation with a leak hole size of 3.25 mm and no wind. Moreover, under relatively higher wind speeds, hydrogen concentration stratification occurs. Notably, the low congestion surrounding the pipeline results in an explosion overpressure too low to cause damage; namely, the highest overpressure is 8 kPa but this lasts less than 0.2 s. This comprehensive numerical study of hydrogen pipeline leakage offers valuable quantitative insights, serving as a vital reference for facility siting and design considerations to eliminate the risk of fire incidents.
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spelling doaj.art-fce0a20cb8a94ed2a9a11cdd7aa093922024-01-26T16:24:07ZengMDPI AGFire2571-62552023-12-0171810.3390/fire7010008Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline LeakageYujie Lin0Xiaodong Ling1Anfeng Yu2Yi Liu3Di Liu4Yazhen Wang5Qian Wu6Yuan Lu7State Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Chemical Safety, Qingdao 266071, ChinaSchool of Safety Engineering, Changzhou University, Changzhou 213164, ChinaAccidental hydrogen releases from pipelines pose significant risks, particularly with the expanding deployment of hydrogen infrastructure. Despite this, there has been a lack of thorough investigation into hydrogen leakage from pipelines, especially under complex real-world conditions. This study addresses this gap by modeling hydrogen gas dispersion, jet fires, and explosions based on practical scenarios. Various factors influencing accident consequences, such as leak hole size, wind speed, wind direction, and trench presence, were systematically examined. The findings reveal that both hydrogen dispersion distance and jet flame thermal radiation distance increase with leak hole size and wind speed. Specifically, the longest dispersion and radiation distances occur when the wind direction aligns with the trench, which is 110 m where the hydrogen concentration is 4% and 76 m where the radiation is 15.8 kW/m<sup>2</sup> in the case of a 325 mm leak hole and wind under 10 m/s. Meanwhile, pipelines lacking trenching exhibit the shortest distances, 0.17 m and 0.98 m, at a hydrogen concentration of 4% and 15.8 kW/m<sup>2</sup> radiation with a leak hole size of 3.25 mm and no wind. Moreover, under relatively higher wind speeds, hydrogen concentration stratification occurs. Notably, the low congestion surrounding the pipeline results in an explosion overpressure too low to cause damage; namely, the highest overpressure is 8 kPa but this lasts less than 0.2 s. This comprehensive numerical study of hydrogen pipeline leakage offers valuable quantitative insights, serving as a vital reference for facility siting and design considerations to eliminate the risk of fire incidents.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/7/1/8hydrogen pipelinejet firedispersionexplosionrisk assessment
spellingShingle Yujie Lin
Xiaodong Ling
Anfeng Yu
Yi Liu
Di Liu
Yazhen Wang
Qian Wu
Yuan Lu
Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
Fire
hydrogen pipeline
jet fire
dispersion
explosion
risk assessment
title Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
title_full Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
title_fullStr Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
title_full_unstemmed Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
title_short Modeling of Hydrogen Dispersion, Jet Fires and Explosions Caused by Hydrogen Pipeline Leakage
title_sort modeling of hydrogen dispersion jet fires and explosions caused by hydrogen pipeline leakage
topic hydrogen pipeline
jet fire
dispersion
explosion
risk assessment
url https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/7/1/8
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