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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Cavitation in a compressor

Event

Event ID
402
Quality
Description
A hydrogen compressor had a major malfunction resulting in serious cavitations, vibrations and dead heading of the 1st stage. The incident resulted in 5 of the 8 lower head bolts on the first stage to snap, oil losses and damage to the 1st stage diaphragms. No breaches of hydrogen or contamination took place. The situation was noticed in a remote log in when reviewing the compressor pressures. The system was safely shut down and followed up by an on site investigation an hour later.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
No Hydrogen Release
Nature of the consequences
Macro-region
Europe
Country
Norway
Date
Main component involved?
Compressor / Booster / Pump (Valve)
How was it involved?
Leak
Initiating cause
Material Degradation (Generic)
Root causes
Unknown (No additional details provided)
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING CAUSE was likely the malfunctioning of a high-pressure component

The most probable component culprit was the inlet valve used for top off filling. This valve may have leaked and allowed high pressure hydrogen into the inter-stage when it was not expected. This caused the 1st stage to dead head which likely lead to the bolts breaking, oil loss and further cavitation's high vibrations.

The ROOT CAUSE was unknown.

Facility

Application
Hydrogen Refuelling Station
Sub-application
HRS 35 MPa
Hydrogen supply chain stage
Hydrogen Compression (No additional details provided)
All components affected
inlet valve,H2 compressor
Location type
Unknown
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Environmental damage
0
Post-event summary
Compressor was repaired ad back in operation as of two weeks after.

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt

The safety measures functioned as designed and the system was safely shut down, although with damages.
However, the investigation was not able to full determine technical reasons and causes of the problem. Few changes were made and was decided to increase the attention to the operational history of the component, to be able to catch early sign of a possible re-occurrence of the problem.

Corrective Measures

(1) To add in the program logic a shutdown in combination with high interstage pressure, which may shutdown the system in time to prevent damage.
(2) Trending information on the station history was updated to see the details of future incidents and operational efficiency of the compressor.
(3) Reduction of the inter-stage safety valve is also in future plans.

Event Nature

Release type
no release
Released amount
0
Actual pressure (MPa)
35
Design pressure (MPa)
35
Presumed ignition source
No release

References

Reference & weblink

Report were available & confidential, and now is lost

JRC assessment