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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Leak from a CGH2 trailer

Event

Event ID
233
Quality
Description

A CGH2 trailer-tractor arrived at a customer’s site for delivery. When stopping at gate and coming out of the cab, the driver noticed a noise coming from the rear of the trailer. The driver opened the rear cabinet door and found a pigtail line cracked. Hydrogen was leaking from the shut-off valve and to a minor extent from the crack. The emergency team on the customer site washed the rear of cabinet until the delivery company expert arrived on the scene. The expert cut and crimped the cracked line. He then placed a block in the valve to secure the leaking tube. The driver did not execute the delivery and returned the full trailer to the home site without incident.
The investigation revealed that road vibration had caused the line to the pigtail to crack. The pigtail and valve seat were replaced and the trailer was brought back to service.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Unignited Hydrogen Release
Nature of the consequences
Leak No Ignition (No additional details provided)
Macro-region
North America
Country
United States
Date
Main component involved?
Piping (Pigtail)
How was it involved?
Rupture
Initiating cause
Loss Of Tightness (Road Vibrations)
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING CAUSE were road travel vibrations damaging a pigtail connection in the trailer pressure control cabinet.

The ROOT CAUSE was shortcoming in the design, and possibly also in the installation of the pigtail – valve connection.

Facility

Application
Hydrogen Transport And Distribution
Sub-application
CGH2 tube trailer
Hydrogen supply chain stage
Hydrogen Transport (No additional details provided)
All components affected
pigtail, valve
Location type
Open
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Environmental damage
0
Currency
US$
Property loss (onsite)
52
Property loss (offsite)
0
Emergency action
The traffic was closed.
An employee of the company responsible for the hydrogen transport visited the site with a thermal imagining camera to make sure that the site was safe and that there would be no further fires or explosions

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt

Simulation studies have shown that a leak inside the trailer control cabinet could cause the formation of a flammable atmosphere. In this case, it is probable that the hydrogen flow of the leak was very small and allowing dispersion in place of formation of a flammable gas mixture.
Nevertheless, the cabinet should be handled as an explosive atmosphere zone and preventing/mitigating measures have to be taken into account in its design. Moreover, a procedure should be in place, which allow the driver to understand what is happening in the cabinet without having to open manually the cabinet door, an action which could provide the ignition energy to a hydrogen-air mixture.

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Released amount
26.5
Actual pressure (MPa)
18
Design pressure (MPa)
18
Presumed ignition source
No ignition

References

Reference & weblink

Incident I-1991060202 of the US Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration PHMSA: <br />
https://portal.phmsa.dot.gov/analytics/saw.dll?Portalpages&PortalPath=%… />
(accessed September 2024)

JRC assessment