Hydrogen Sensing Technologies for the Safe and Reliable Decarbonization of Electric Power: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- The stakes of replacing fossil fuels with hydrogen in the power generation sector, which is the focus of this article, will be highlighted in Section 2.
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- Section 3 will present the safety and reliability aspects of processes involving hydrogen.
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- The review of sensing techniques will be the subject of Section 4, in which we will evaluate the performances of the sensor candidates with the greatest potential, based on industrial metrological standards, namely in terms of reproducibility, response/recovery times, and reliability.
2. Electric Power Generation: A Key Sector to Implement Energy Chains
2.1. Deployment Strategies
2.2. Main Components of a Hydrogen-Based Energy Chain Intended for Power Generation
2.2.1. The Electrolyzer
2.2.2. The Transportation Networks
2.2.3. The Production of Electric Power
3. Essential Safety and Reliability Considerations
3.1. Hydrogen Safety
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- One can perform a compositional analysis of the gas, i.e., determine the concentrations of all its flammable constituents and use the so-called “Le Chatelier’s rule” to calculate the resulting LEL of the mixture; this rule is set out in Appendix A attached to this paper.
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- Alternatively, one can use catalytic detector devices (see Section 4.5.2 below), which directly give the LEL of the gas without the need for compositional analysis.
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- Hydrogen density is nearly eight times lower, and its diffusivity in the air is about three times larger; both properties induce a risk of forming H2 clouds in potential stagnation zones located at height.
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- It has an exceptionally large explosivity range (from 4 to 75% in the air) and a low ignition energy (0.018 mJ), two factors which increase the inflammation risk in the case of leaks.
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- Hydrogen flames are not visible because they do not emit in the visible spectrum, which poses a particular risk during fire interventions but prevents the spread of fire by radiant heating.
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- Finally, as regards the combustion process in gas turbines, the very high flame speed of hydrogen tends to generate “flashbacks”, i.e., flame retro-propagation inside the combustors, with the risk of inflicting severe damage to machine components. It should be noted that, although laminar flames behave very differently from the highly turbulent flames that prevail in gas turbines, their speed gives a reasonable idea of the reactivity of hydrogen in GT combustors, in comparison with methane.
Property − Fuel | Spec. Gravity /Air [-] | Fick Diffusion Coeff. in Air; 1 atm; 25 °C [cm2·s−1] | LEL–UEL Low/Up. Expl. Lim. [% vol] | Min. Ignition Energy [mJ] | Lamin. Flame Speed [cm·s−1] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
H2 | 0.07 | 0.75 | 4.0–75 | 0.018 | 265 |
CH4 | 0.55 | 0.25 | 5.0–15 | 0.033 | 33 |
H2/CH4 | 7.9 | 3 | 7.1 * | ≈0.5 | 8 |
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- Its high propensity to develop deflagration-to-detonation transitions.
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- The high and fast pressure rises during explosions, which are consequently very difficult to dampen by venting. Indeed, H2 has the highest rate of pressure increase in a closed volume:[dP/dt]max = Kgas V−1/3 (KH2 >> KCH4)
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- The high mobility of hydrogen molecules not only in gaseous media but also through sealing defects and even through solid walls. In fact, regarding the modes of transport of hydrogen in different media, three distinct types of processes must be distinguished:
- Transport process in the air: H2 is about fifteen times lighter and three times more diffusive than air; it therefore has a strong propensity for buoyancy: in the event of a leak from an installation, H2 tends to expand rapidly in the air and, if this installation is confined in a closed volume, to accumulate under the roofs of machine rooms. Whenever the process allows it, outdoor installation is preferable since it allows a fast dilution of H2 leaks in open air and avoids the formation of potentially explosive H2 clouds.
- Effusion through gaps: The term effusion describes the situation of a confined gas escaping through a tiny orifice or gap. Such gas leaks behave like laminar flows. H2 and CH4 have similar dynamic viscosities (≈10 µPa.s) but hydrogen has an eight times lower density; its kinematic viscosity is therefore also eight times lower. This explains why H2 easily escapes through very small gaps (sealing defects), which increases the criticality of tightly fastening flanges and fittings and requires increased precautions during maintenance and assembly procedures.
- Diffusion across metallic materials: Graham’s law, which describes the transport of a gas across a solid, states that the rate of this process is inversely proportional to the square root of the molecular mass. Therefore, hydrogen diffuses much faster than hydrocarbons. Additionally, H2 molecules tend to dissociate into H atoms in the lattices of transition metals: these H atoms can then diffuse through the alloys of industrial components; their recombination at the level of alloy defects (typically at voids or inclusions) can cause material embrittlement and “blistering”. These effects are magnified by pressure and temperature. The compatibility of hydrogen with structural alloys must therefore be checked.
3.2. Process Control
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- The proper control of electricity production, which constitutes the last link in the hydrogen energy chain, calls for specific considerations.
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- Now, since the Wobbe Index depends both on the LHV and specific gravity, the hydrogen content of the gas fuel must be continuously monitored to make possible the proper tuning of the GT combustion process.
4. Sensing Technologies and Devices
4.1. Metrological Criteria
- The sensitivity of a sensor defines the variation in its response relative to the variation in the concentration of the target gas. In other words, the more a sensor can detect small changes in the concentration (ΔC) of a gas with a significant variation in its response (ΔR), the more sensitive it is. Equation (1) makes it possible to quantify the sensitivity Sb of a sensor.
- The selectivity is its ability to provide a response solely based on the target gas among the rest of the gas matrix. In a binary system, the value of the selectivity St of a sensor is expressed by the ratio of the sensitivities of two gaseous components, Sbgas 1 and Sbgas 2, as expressed by Equation (2):
- The response time “tx” is the time required to obtain 15% (t15), 50% (t50), or 90% (t90) of its final response. In this paper, we will consider the response time t90.
- The recovery time is defined in the same way as the response time: the 90% recovery time is the time required to return to 10% of the previously measured concentration signal. The ability of a sensor to permanently return to its base line value is called reversibility.
- The stability represents its ability to provide a response without drift over time for the same measured concentration.
4.2. Gas Chromatography: A Separative Method
- Catharometric detectors, or thermal conductivity detectors (TCDs), are used for species having much higher thermal conductivities than the carrier gas (see Section 4.4.3).
- Flame ionization detectors (FIDs) are for combustible components: these are burned in a flame, generating ions that are collected and quantified [50].
- Electron capture detectors (ECDs) are used for electroactive molecules such as halogenated compounds.
- Flame photometry detectors (FPDs) use the photons emitted during the combustion of certain compounds (containing, e.g., sulfur or phosphorus).
- Atomic emission detectors (AEDs), based on argon or helium plasmas, are versatile detectors able to detect many species; these are atomized and ionized in the plasma, passing from their ground state to excited states; their relaxation process emits electromagnetic waves that are detected using optical devices (see Section 4.4.2) [49,51,52].
4.3. Spectrometric Method: Raman Spectrometry
4.4. Physical Sensors
4.4.1. Acoustic Sensors
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- The quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), sketched in item A of Figure 5, is historically the first acoustic sensing device. The piezoelectric quartz crystal is compressed between two electrodes. Its resonance at a known frequency creates an acoustic wave that is confined within the crystal. When the gaseous analyte adsorbs on the surface of the latter, the resonance frequency varies due to the change in mass. This results in a modulation of the acoustic wave inside the material. This modulation is a function of the mass of the adsorbed gas analyte [71,72,73]. As it stands, the quartz crystal is unable to differentiate between a gas and a mixture of gases, so to achieve a certain selectivity, a catalytic material (metal or polymer) is added to the quartz [74,75]. This provides an additional response component to mass variation. Hydrogen undergoes catalytic oxidation on the surface of the material, inducing a variation in the material’s surface temperature.
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- The sensing based on surface acoustic waves (SAWs; item B of Figure 5) uses a principle similar to that of QCMs by the use of a piezoelectric material. The difference is that two interdigitated transducers (IDTs) placed on either side of the piezoelectric material are used (1) to cause the latter to resonate, thereby creating a Rayleigh acoustic wave from an electrical signal, and (2) to convert the acoustic wave having passed through the material into an electrical signal. One measures the variation in the amplitude of acoustic waves generated at the surface due to the presence of the adsorbed gas [76,77,78,79].
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- The ultrasound (US) measurement technique or “ultrasonic sensor” (item C of Figure 5) operates like a sonar. One irradiates a material using a laser, thus generating US waves that are reflected by the surface of the material. The propagation of these waves is a function of the nature and concentration of the gas. A US wave receiver analyzes the change in the reception time of the reflected waves, i.e., the change in their propagation speed caused by the adsorbed gas [80].
4.4.2. Optical Sensors
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- The technology of reflectivity on micro-mirrors or RMM (item A of Figure 6) measures the variation in light intensity reflected by thin layers of a sensitive material (most often palladium), also called micro-mirrors, placed inside of the optical cladding. This variation in luminous intensity is characteristic of the gas present and proportional to its content [86].
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- The surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology (item B of Figure 6) is based on the generation of surface plasmons [87], which are electromagnetic waves whose propagation on a metal surface depends on the superficial physicochemical state of that metal and changes when the gaseous analyte is adsorbed. The plasmons generated are excited using prismatic connector mechanisms, optical fibers, or even waveguides. One measures the change in the resonance wavelength of these plasmons, which depends on the nature of the gas adsorbed on the metal.
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- Fiber Bragg Gratings (FBGs; item C of Figure 6) are optical fibers in which a network of two alternating layers of materials with different refractive indices has been specifically etched at the core of the optical fiber according to Bragg’s law; this allows the periodic modulation of the refractive index throughout the propagation path. The etched networks are covered with a material sensitive to the gas to be detected and whose refractive index is different from that of the material of the fiber core. Thus, the signal obtained by this method is the variation in the Bragg wavelength corresponding to the maximum difference in reflectivity between the gas-sensitive materials and the core material. The nature and concentration of the gaseous analyte modify the reflectivity of the sensitive material, which allows for the analysis of that gas [88].
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- Interferometry (item D of Figure 6) measures the interference between several coherent waves; the wavelength of constructive interferences depends on the minute change in size of the sensitive material used as the detector, this size change resulting from the adsorption of a gaseous analyte. In particular, hydrogen has the ability to diffuse inside some metals, causing their expansion. One measures the change in the constructive wavelength which is associated with the gaseous analyte.
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- The evanescent-field detection method (item E of Figure 6) refers to the loss of light intensity caused by the interaction between the gaseous analyte and an electromagnetic wave crossing a modified optical fiber; the modification consists in replacing a portion of the cladding material with another one which is sensitive to the analyte and through which the wave passes; this creates an “evanescent field”. At the surface of the sensitive material, the gas induces a variation in the light intensity of the evanescent field that is proportional to its superficial concentration. The amplitude of the wave decreases exponentially when the distance from the source increases [89]. The sensitive material can be coated with specific adsorbing substances to enhance the sensitivity [81].
4.4.3. Catharometric Sensors
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- The first device, the so-called Pellistor configuration (Figure 5), comprises two cells: (i) a measuring cell in which an electrically heated thermistor (usually based on Pt or Pd) is swept by the surrounding gas and (ii) a reference cell in which another thermistor is swept by a reference gas (air or natural gas, for example).
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- Another simpler configuration involves two thermistors maintained at a constant temperature difference. As it passes through the hotter thermistor, the gaseous analyte withdraws a quantity of heat according to its thermal conductivity: the current or voltage required to maintain the temperature difference between the two thermistors allows for the deduction of the thermal conductivity of the gas stream and, therefore, its concentration in the air or the concentration of the gas analyte inside the gas mixture.
4.5. Chemical Sensors
4.5.1. Electrochemical Sensors
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- Amperometric devices operate at a constant potential. The gaseous analyte reacts at the working electrode (at the anode in the case of H2; at the cathode in the case of O2); one measures here the resulting current between the working and auxiliary electrode; Faraday’s law allows for the correlation of this current to the concentration of the target gas [100].
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- In a Potentiometric device, the electrochemical cell operates at zero current. One measures the potential difference between the working and the reference electrode, which is related through Nernst’s law to the gas concentration and the standard potential of the redox couple which is formed by the analyte and the species it produces through its reaction at the working electrode.
4.5.2. Catalytic Sensors
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- The Pellistor device uses two electrically heated coils which also serve as thermistors. These coils heat porous beads called “Pellistor beads” in which they are embedded. One of these beads is a catalyst which constitutes the active component used for detection, while the other is inactive and serves as a reference to counteract external parasitic effects.
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- The thermoelectric sensing mode, based on the Seebeck effect, relies on the temperature difference that exists between two different materials that have conducting or semiconducting properties and are connected together at two junction points, one of them being a catalyst sensitive to the gaseous analyte. The exothermic reaction between H2 and O2 (from the air) at the surface of the sensitive material creates a temperature difference between both junctions, resulting in a potential difference, which is translated into the concentration of the analyte.
4.5.3. Resistive Sensors
4.5.4. Devices Based on the Work Function
5. Matrix of Sensor Performances
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- It fulfills the function of full compositional analysis, particularly with regard to the combustion of H2NG blends having variable hydrogen contents.
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- It obtains the best score in terms of sensitivity, selectivity, stability, and the ability to work in gas matrices deprived of oxygen, which are the crucial qualities expected to reach operation reliability; these analysis systems must be equipped with detectors adapted to the specific gas components being analyzed.
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Theoretical Origin of Le Chatelier’s Rule
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- On the one hand, the Burgess–Wheeler rule (A3a) can be demonstrated using the concept of minimum flame propagation temperature (Tfl*).
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- On the other hand, Le Chatelier’s rule (A1a) can be deduced from the Burgess–Wheeler relation.
Appendix B. Particular Interest of Catalytic Devices in Gas Detection
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LHV | Mass Basis (MJ/kg) | Volume Basis (MJ/Nm3) | No of Mole of Products per Mole of Reactant |
---|---|---|---|
CH4 | 50.0 | 35.8 | 3 (CO2 + 2 H2O) |
H2 | 120.0 | 10.8 | 1 (H2O) |
Material | Technique | Response/Recovery Times | H2 Concentration/Sensitivity | Environment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Porous Pd/Pt thin film [77] | SAW | 4.1/- | 3.7 ppm: (LDL *) Measurement at 1000 ppm/60%/ppm of N2 | N2 |
Pd/Cu NW on Al/SiO2 [76] | SAW | 4/4 | 1% v/v/- | Air |
Pd/Cr on quartz crystal resonator [73] | QCM | ~15/- | <10 ppm (LDL) 250 ppm H2/165 MHz | N2/air |
Pd-Ni alloy thin film on QCM [83,84] | QCM | ~min/min | 40,000 ppm/- | N2 |
Pt-rGO on 128° YX-LiNbO3 [85] | Ultrasonic | ~1 (air)/10 min >1 (Ar)/tens of min | 100 ppm/308 kHz/mol in air 1000 ppm/24.4 kHz/mol in Ar | Air/argon |
ZnO nanowire [78] | SAW | 9–15/6–9 | 2% H2 2117 ppm (LDL)/ 0.015 Hz/ppm | Air |
Material | Technique | Response/Recovery Times | Sensitivity/H2 Concentration | Environment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pd/Au nanofilms [92] | FBG | 37/49 | 1.02% H2 | Air |
Pd-Au NP @PTFE/PMMA [93] | SPR | 1/5 | 4% H2 v/v | Vacuum |
Pd ultrathin film [87] | SPR | 3/10 | 4% H2 v/v | Ar |
Pd/MnO2 [94] | Near-IR absorption | 240/480 | 1% H2 | Air |
Graphene-Au-Pd [95] | Interferometry | 4.3/- | 3.5% H2 | N2 |
Zn-MOF [96] | Interaction of evanescent field | 20/27 | - | - |
WO3-Pd2Pt-Pt [86] | RMM | 20/10 | >1000 ppm | Air |
Pt–WO3 film [97] | FBG | <90/<90 | - | Air |
Sensitive | Selective | Response and Recovery Time | Stability | Cost and Size | Work in Anaerobic Environment | Safety Application | Process Control in Real Time | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gas chromatography with TCD | +++ | +++ | +/- | + | X/X | Yes | No | Yes | |
Raman spectrometry | +++ | +++ | +/+ | + | X/X | Yes | No | Yes | |
Opticals | RMM | + | + | -/- | + | X | Yes | Medium | Medium |
SPR | + | + | -/- | + | X | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
FBG | + | - | +/- | + | X | Yes | Medium | Medium | |
Interferometry | + | - | +/+ | + | X | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Evanescent waves | ++ | + | X/X | - | X | Yes | Yes | Medium | |
Acoustics | QCM | ++ | - | X/X | X | - | Yes | Yes | No |
SAW | ++ | - | +/+ | + | - | Yes | Yes | No | |
Ultrasonic | +++ | + | +++/X | + | X | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Electrochemical | Amperometric | ++ | + | +/- | X | + | Yes | Yes | No |
Potentiometric | ++ | + | +/+ | X | + | Yes | Yes | No | |
Catharometric | + | - | +/- | - | + | Yes | Yes | Medium | |
Catalytic | + | - | -/- | - | + | No | Yes | No | |
Resistive | MOS | ++ | + | ++/+ | + | + | No | Yes | No |
MS | + | + + | ++/+ | - | + | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Work function | Schottky | - | - | +/+ | X | + | Yes | Medium | Medium |
Transistor | +++ | ++ | -/- | X | + | Yes | Medium | Medium | |
Condenser | +++ | + + | +/+ | X | + | Yes | Medium | Medium |
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Moussa, N.; Molière, M.; Costil, S.; Liao, H.; Montagne, P.; Biehler, P.; Impellizzeri, E.; Fabre, J.-L.; Serpollier, A.; Guillien, T. Hydrogen Sensing Technologies for the Safe and Reliable Decarbonization of Electric Power: A Review. Energies 2024, 17, 4532. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17184532
Moussa N, Molière M, Costil S, Liao H, Montagne P, Biehler P, Impellizzeri E, Fabre J-L, Serpollier A, Guillien T. Hydrogen Sensing Technologies for the Safe and Reliable Decarbonization of Electric Power: A Review. Energies. 2024; 17(18):4532. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17184532
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoussa, Naguy, Michel Molière, Sophie Costil, Hanlin Liao, Pierre Montagne, Pierre Biehler, Eric Impellizzeri, Jean-Luc Fabre, Alexandre Serpollier, and Térence Guillien. 2024. "Hydrogen Sensing Technologies for the Safe and Reliable Decarbonization of Electric Power: A Review" Energies 17, no. 18: 4532. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17184532
APA StyleMoussa, N., Molière, M., Costil, S., Liao, H., Montagne, P., Biehler, P., Impellizzeri, E., Fabre, J. -L., Serpollier, A., & Guillien, T. (2024). Hydrogen Sensing Technologies for the Safe and Reliable Decarbonization of Electric Power: A Review. Energies, 17(18), 4532. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17184532