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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Leak Fir from the a hydrogen flange in a synthetic adhesives production plant

Event

Event ID
633
Quality
Description
This accident occurred at the unit producing synthetic adhesives by adding hydrogen to petroleum resin under high temperature and pressure. Hydrogen was added to the reaction via a supply pipe at the bottom of the reactor.
Hydrogen leaked from a flange of the check valve attached to the hydrogen supply pipe and ignited due to static electricity. The leak was due to the deformation of the flange gasket, made of aluminium. The aluminium had deformed due to the high temperature, reducing the tightness of the flange.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
Fire (No additional details provided)
Macro-region
Asia
Country
Japan
Date
Main component involved?
Flange (Bolts)
How was it involved?
Leak & Formation Of A Flammable H2-Air Mixture
Initiating cause
Loss Of Tightness (Thermal Stress/Cycling)
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING CAUSE was the deformation of the gasket of a flange on the hydrogen supply pipe.
The KHK report attributes the ROOT CAUSE to the wrong choice of the gasket material. The report does not specify if this was due to a wrong installation (human error) or a lack of clarity of procedures.

Facility

Application
Chemical Industry
Sub-application
resins production
Hydrogen supply chain stage
All components affected
gasket, flange, check valve,
Location type
Unknown
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
1
Number of fatalities
0
Post-event summary
minor injury

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Presumed ignition source
Static electricity

References

Reference & weblink

High Pressure Gas Accident Cases Database of the KHK (High Pressure Gas Safety Association): <br />
https://www.khk.or.jp/public_information/incident_investigation/hpg_inc… />
(accessed May 2025)

JRC assessment