Skip to main content
Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Fire on a hydrogen bottle in R&D lab

Event

Event ID
873
Quality
Description
The incident occurred at a university facility, in the premises of a spin-off company. A worker was checking the hydrogen pressure by opening the main valve on a hydrogen cylinder, when hydrogen escaped through the pressure regulator and ignited. The fire was contained in the laboratory, thanks to the building's fire sprinklers which were able to extinguish the fire before fire brigade arrived. The regulator on this cylinder had not been properly closed and was releasing into the lab.
There were no injuries.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
False Alarm (No additional details provided)
Macro-region
North America
Country
United States
Date
Main component involved?
Pressure Regulator
Initiating cause
Wrong Operation
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The H2TOLS report at the base of this entry identified as probable root cause a human error in not following the procedures, with contributing cause incomplete procedures.
Form the H2TOOLS report it seems to appear that the probable cause of the ignition was residues of catalytic materials in the setting.

Facility

Application
Laboratory / R&d
Sub-application
University laboratory
Hydrogen supply chain stage
All components affected
CGH2 bottle, regulator
Location type
Confined
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Environmental damage
0
Property loss (offsite)
0
Post-event summary
Probable losses were related to water damage from the splinkers to lab equipment .

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt
This actions which brought to this release belong to usual, standard actions executed every day in all laboratories using standard compressed gas bottles. It is very human that a certain amount of automatism take control.
This event seems have been triggered by distraction or by habits. It is probable that in most of the case, the regulator was connected to a system with additional valve preventing hydrogen releases, and that in this case it was not. It is also possible that a lack of specific knowledge paid a role. In any case, a pressure check n a bottle is one of those simple actions which are almost always executed without reading written procedures before. It is the role of a supervisor to ‘ break the habit’ and remind regularly workers of the possible consequence of such a simple action.
Corrective Measures
The H2TOLS provided the following recommendations:
(1) To Install a valve after the regulator as an added precaution.
(2) Clean the coupler at the end of the hydrogen delivery tube after each use to ensure that any catalyst residue has been removed.

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Actual pressure (MPa)
low
Design pressure (MPa)
20
Presumed ignition source
Catalytic reaction

References

Reference & weblink

Event description in the US database H2Tools/Lesson Learned<br />
https://h2tools.org/lessons/hydrogen-cylinder-fire-laboratory<br />
(accessed October 2024)<br />

JRC assessment