Numerical modelling of hydrogen leakages in confined spaces for domestic applications

Date

2024-01-01

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0360-3199

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Thawani B, Hazael R, Critchley R. (2024) Numerical modelling of hydrogen leakages in confined spaces for domestic applications. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Volume 56, February 2024, pp.797-806

Abstract

The UK government tentatively plans to use hydrogen for domestic applications by 2035. While the use of hydrogen aims to reduce the dependence on hydrocarbons, certain factors need consideration. Since hydrogen is much lighter, and more reactive than methane, it is crucial to understand the change in risk for accident scenarios involving hydrogen in a domestic setting. Numerical modelling was used to simulate the leakage of hydrogen and methane in small, enclosed spaces such as kitchen cupboards. The k- ε turbulence model was used along with the species transport model to simulate the leakage of gas for different inlet locations and leak diameters (1.8 mm–7.2 mm). From the modelling study, it was observed that hydrogen and methane both tend to stratify from top of the control volume to the bottom. The key finding was that, under adverse conditions (leak from a 7.2 mm diameter hole) and due to greater volumetric flow, hydrogen tends to reach equilibrium concentration 45s faster than methane for a total leak duration of 600s. Additionally, it was noted that cases with leak inlet locations near corners had 28% lower hydrogen concentrations, and 25% lower methane concentrations as compared to leak inlet locations near the centre of the cupboard.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Hydrogen, Energy, Security, Modelling and simulation, Gas leak

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Relationships

Relationships

Supplements

Funder/s

The work was supported by Cranfield University and DNV Energy Systems, UK.