Safety strategies and engineering solutions for hydrogen heavy-duty vehicles

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Title
Safety strategies and engineering solutions for hydrogen heavy-duty vehicles

CoPED ID
995d0b75-38e1-4e4e-ba44-3fb02f4528f3

Status
Active

Funder

Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 19, 2022

End Date
Sept. 18, 2026

Description

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Strategic political developments towards a low carbon economy enable practical implementation of zero-emission applications including hydrogen-fuelled heavy-duty vehicles (HDV) such as buses and trucks. The use of hydrogen in public transport implies stringent requirements of bus design. Not all knowledge gaps are closed to manufacture inherently safer HDV transport, including double-deck buses. Industry and regulators have particular concerns about two aspects of HDV design that are considered critical for their successful roll-out: - development of refuelling protocol for heavy-duty vehicles capable to provide refuelling time comparable with modern fossil-fuel vehicles and yet not jeopardising the safety of onboard compressed hydrogen storage system (CHSS), and - fire-resistance rating of current CHSS, which may lead to their rupture in a fire with catastrophic consequences, i.e. blast wave, fireball and projectiles. The project will critically review "old" and new hazards of HDV of different designs and sectors, i.e. buses and trucks. Existing prevention and mitigation safety strategies and engineering solutions, knowledge gaps and technological bottlenecks in the provision of safety of HDV will be identified and analysed. The expected research outcomes may be in the form of: - recommendations for the inherently safer design of HDV, - fuelling protocol for different CHSS; - optimised safety design of CHSS using TPRD; - safety design of CHSS based on self-venting TPRD-less containers. It is envisaged that the research will rely on the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) to study and optimise the heat and mass transfer during refuelling, the performance of CHSS in realistic fires of different intensity, including smouldering and impinging jet fires. The successful candidate is expected to have a strong background in one of the following disciplines: mathematics, physics, chemistry, fluid dynamics, heat and mass transfer, combustion. Any previous experience of theoretical analysis and/or numerical studies is welcome. The research will be conducted at the HySAFER Centre. The candidate will focus on CFD modelling and numerical simulations, use relevant software (ANSYS Fluent, FieldView, etc.) and the state-of-the-art computational resources - multi-processor workstations available at HySAFER Centre and HPC facility available within EPSRC KELVIN-2 project. This research will be aligned to HySAFER's externally funded projects and reported at international conferences. Publication of results in peer-reviewed journals is expected.

Sergii Kashkarov SUPER_PER
Atish Gawale STUDENT_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Coaches (cars)
  2. Computational fluid dynamics
  3. Optimisation
  4. Hydrogen
  5. Refuelling
  6. Safety and security
  7. Heat transfer

Extracted key phrases
  1. Mitigation safety strategy
  2. Safety design
  3. Duty vehicle capable
  4. HDV design
  5. Hydrogen heavy
  6. Bus design
  7. Safe HDV transport
  8. Fuel vehicle
  9. Engineering solution
  10. Different design
  11. Hydrogen storage system
  12. Strategic political development
  13. Different CHSS
  14. Low carbon economy
  15. Current CHSS

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations