Skip to main content
Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Explosion during hydrogen supply in a chemical company

Event

Event ID
1089
Quality
Description
This event occurred when a hydrogen-carrying trailer was supplying hydrogen to a chemical plant.
Instead of filling the hydrogen stationary storage, large quantities of hydrogen were transferred from the trailer into the compressed air plant network. The explosive atmosphere ignited, exploded and opened a flange of the compressed air line, from which the hydrogen escaped and burned off.

The cause was the confusion between hydrogen and compressed air connections: due to missing or unclear labelling, the trailer operator connected by mistake the trailer hydrogen outlet to the plant compressed air supply.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
Macro-region
Europe
Country
Germany
Date
Main component involved?
Joint/Connection
How was it involved?
Internal Explosion (H2-Air Mixture)
Initiating cause
Wrong Operation
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING/direct cause was the erroneous injection of hydrogen into a compressed air network, due to the confusion between hydrogen and compressed air connections.
During operation, trailers were filled for various consumers. The design of the trailer connections was standardised only for the filling and emptying lines. Other connections, such as auxiliary media (compressed air) or analysis caps, were designed differently for each trailer. The incident occurred due to confusion between compressed air and sampling connections due to the mentioned different design of the analysis connection, similar to compressed air, on other trailers. On top of that, labelling was missing or unclear.

The ROOT CAUSE was related to an inadequate risk assessment, which failed (1) to recognise the possibility of mixing up connections and (2) to deploy measures aiming to avoid it.

Facility

Application
Hydrogen Transport And Distribution
Sub-application
CGH2 tube trailer
Hydrogen supply chain stage
Hydrogen Transfer (No additional details provided)
All components affected
compressed air network
Location type
Unknown
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Environmental damage
0
Property loss (onsite)
0
Property loss (offsite)
0
Post-event summary
Damage to the compressed air pipeline and the silo

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt
In this event, when transferring hydrogen from a hydrogen to a stationary storage, the personnel made the mistake to connect a hydrogen line to a compressed air line. Data on pressure are missing, nevertheless, it can be assumed for the pressure industrial standards, i.e. for hydrogen in the trailer a value between 200 and 300 bar, and for the compressed air a value below 10 bar. Therefore, hydrogen was released massively into the air pipelines, forming a flammable mixture.
The confusion between lines at the basis of this event should be excluded
(1) By design, i.e. a hydrogen line connector should not be compatible with any other gas lines connector, making mechanically impossible to create a working joint between different lines.
And/or
(2) By procedures, which requires clear guidelines, clear labelling of the lines and awareness among personnel of the hazards involved by the operations.
Corrective Measures

On the short term: to use a mobile compressor unit instead of the plant compressed air supply.
(i) The owner of the trailer to clearly label the nozzles for all media.
(ii) To include the compressed air and hydrogen connections in the plant operating instructions.
(ii) To equip the compressed air network with a backflow protection .
(iv) To communicate the event to the industrial gases association, to develop a connection design able to avoid mix-up.

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Presumed ignition source
Not reported

References

Reference & weblink

Event from German database ZEMA<br />
https://www.infosis.uba.de/index.php/en/binaries/asset/zema_ereignis/31… />
(accessed December 2023)

JRC assessment