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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Failure of a LH2 tank without ignition

Event

Event ID
308
Quality
Description
During a test of an 8 foot scale tank loaded with LH2, the tank burst at 77 psi (ca. 5.3 bar) destroying the test installation. No fire or explosion occurred and the area control was successfully recovered within 24 hours.
[Ordin, NASA (1974)]
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?
Lh2 Storage Vessel
How was it involved?
Rupture
Initiating cause
Manufacturing Defect/Error
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The IMMEDIATE CAUSE was the rupture of the tank.

The test was programmed for 79 psi maximum and the tank burst at 77 psi. The report does not mention it, but a test at 79 psi would suggest that the nominal working pressure (NWP) of the tank was this value or above. Therefore, its Maximum Allowed Working Pressure (MAWP) would have been much higher (it is usually between 2 and 2.5 ties the NWP). This indicates a failure far below the load capability assumed by design.

The ROOT CAUSE was vey probably a manufacturing error. An additional FACTOR contributing to an escalation (the whole testing facility was destroyed) was the lack of an emergency recovery plan for these situations.

Facility

Application
Non-Road Vehicles
Sub-application
Aerospace
Hydrogen supply chain stage
Hydrogen Storage (No additional details provided)
All components affected
LH2 tank
Location type
Unknown
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Actual pressure (MPa)
0.53
Design pressure (MPa)
<1.0
Presumed ignition source
No ignition

References

Reference & weblink

Mishap no 6 in <br />
P. L. Ordin, Review of hydrogen accidents and incidents in NASA operations, 1974, NASA TM X-71565<br />
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19740020344

Lowesmith et al., Safety issues of the liquefaction, storage and transportation of liquid hydrogen: An analysis of incidents and HAZIDS, Int. J. Hydrogen energy (2014) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2014.08.002

Hankinson and Lowesmith, Qualitative Risk Assessment of Hydrogen Liquefaction, Storage and Transportation, FCH JU project IDEALHY, Deliverable 3.10 (2013)<br />
confidential<br />
(accessed October 2025)

Hankinson and Lowesmith, HAZIDs for Hydrogen Liquefaction, Storage and Transportation , FCH JU project IDEALHY, Deliverable 3.11 (2013)<br />
https://www.idealhy.eu/uploads/documents/IDEALHY_D3-10%20HAZIDs_Liquefa… />
(Only summary publicly available, accessed October 2025)

JRC assessment