PRESLHY Experiment series E3.1 (Cryogenic Hydrogen Blow-down/Discharge) results – part A "high pressure"

DOI

In the frame of the PRESLHY project more than 200 hydrogen blow-down experiments were made with the DisCha-facility at KIT and about half of the experiments were made at cryogenic temperatures (approx. 80 K). During the experimental campaign the facility was continuously improved and extended, since several problems with the facility and instrumentation were encountered. However, the tests showed very good reproducibility. Although the actual exploitation of the data is left for the further modelling work in the work packages WP3 and WP4, some interesting observations are: not a single test showed a spontaneous ignition, although the cold jets generated relative strong electrostatic fields. This static electricity seems to be generated by ice crystal which form on the release nozzle before the tests. The cold tests with large diameter and high pressure show strong temperature decay in the reservoir close to the boiling point of hydrogen and quite a huge fraction of “particles” entrained in the released jet were recorded. It is assumed that this is ice from ambient humidity and frozen on the nozzle before the actual test. However, there might be condensed hydrogen involved, as the acceleration of the gas through the nozzle might bring down the temperature below the boiling point. Only detailed multi-phase simulations accounting for non-equilibrium effects of the real gases’ behaviour might clarify this issue.

Result dataset files in Excel format of the sub-set of experiments with most mature measurement set-up. Data for all initial pressure levels, but same temperature (tt=80K/300K) and same nozzle diameter (mm=05/1/2/4mm) packed in zip file, named PRE3P1A_KIT_Dmm_ttK_DATA.zip

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.35097/1187
Metadata Access https://www.radar-service.eu/oai/OAIHandler?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite&identifier=10.35097/1187
Provenance
Creator Jordan, Thomas
Publisher Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Contributor RADAR
Publication Year 2023
Rights Open Access; Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format application/x-tar
Discipline Construction Engineering and Architecture; Engineering; Engineering Sciences