vinhermes
Marine/Ocean
- Aug 29, 2009
- 36
Good morning to all,
I have a question about ventilation flowrate definition in order to stay below a concentration threshold during a leakage scenario. In concrete words, we have a room of 24 m3 that contains hydrogen fuel cells. The gaseous hydrogen maximum flow rate in the pipe is 4370 m3/h. In case of a pipe failure, the rules require that we stay below 1% concentration (meaning there can't be more than 0.24 m3 of H² in the room at any time).
This means that without ventilation, the 0.24m3 will be filled with hydrogen in 0.2 seconds approximately (0.24m3 / 4370m3/h * 3600).
The approach from there is that the volume needs thus to be renewed every 0.2 seconds -> 300 times per minutes -> 18 000 times per hour -> 18 000 * 24 m3 = 432 000 m3/h ventilation requirements.
Is this correct? This seems unmanageable to integrate... Thanks for your feedback. Vincent
I have a question about ventilation flowrate definition in order to stay below a concentration threshold during a leakage scenario. In concrete words, we have a room of 24 m3 that contains hydrogen fuel cells. The gaseous hydrogen maximum flow rate in the pipe is 4370 m3/h. In case of a pipe failure, the rules require that we stay below 1% concentration (meaning there can't be more than 0.24 m3 of H² in the room at any time).
This means that without ventilation, the 0.24m3 will be filled with hydrogen in 0.2 seconds approximately (0.24m3 / 4370m3/h * 3600).
The approach from there is that the volume needs thus to be renewed every 0.2 seconds -> 300 times per minutes -> 18 000 times per hour -> 18 000 * 24 m3 = 432 000 m3/h ventilation requirements.
Is this correct? This seems unmanageable to integrate... Thanks for your feedback. Vincent