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  2. Hydrogen safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_safety

    NASA also references Safety Standard for Hydrogen and Hydrogen Systems [110] and the Sourcebook for Hydrogen Applications. [ 111 ] [ 106 ] Another organization responsible for hydrogen safety guidelines is the Compressed Gas Association (CGA) , which has a number of references of their own covering general hydrogen storage, [ 112 ] piping ...

  3. Hydrogen transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_transport

    Hydrogen can be transported in gaseous form, typically in a pipeline. Because hydrogen gas is highly reactive, the pipeline or other container must be able to resist interacting with the gas. Hydrogen's low density at atmospheric pressure means that gas transport is suitable only for low volume requirements. [1]

  4. High-pressure electrolysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-pressure_electrolysis

    Ultrahigh-pressure electrolysis is high-pressure electrolysis operating at 340–690 bars (5,000–10,000 psi). [8] At ultra-high pressures the water solubility and cross-permeation across the membrane of H 2 and O 2 is affecting hydrogen purity, modified PEMs are used to reduce cross-permeation in combination with catalytic H 2 /O 2 recombiners to maintain H 2 levels in O 2 and O 2 levels in ...

  5. Hydrogen compressor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_compressor

    Hydrogen compressors are closely related to hydrogen pumps and gas compressors: both increase the pressure on a fluid and both can transport the fluid through a pipe.As gases are compressible, the compressor also reduces the volume of hydrogen gas, whereas the main result of a pump raising the pressure of a liquid is to allow the liquid hydrogen to be transported elsewhere.

  6. High-temperature electrolysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-temperature_electrolysis

    High-temperature electrolysis schema. Decarbonization of Economy via hydrogen produced from HTE. High-temperature electrolysis (also HTE or steam electrolysis, or HTSE) is a technology for producing hydrogen from water at high temperatures or other products, such as iron or carbon nanomaterials, as higher energy lowers needed electricity to split molecules and opens up new, potentially better ...

  7. Electrolysis of water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrolysis_of_water

    Pure water has a charge carrier density similar to semiconductors [12] [page needed] since it has a low autoionization, K w = 1.0×10 −14 at room temperature and thus pure water conducts current poorly, 0.055 μS/cm. [13] Unless a large potential is applied to increase the autoionization of water, electrolysis of pure water proceeds slowly ...

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  9. Hydrogen leak testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_leak_testing

    During the hydrogen sensor test, the object is filled with a mixture of 5% hydrogen/ 95% nitrogen, (below 5.7% hydrogen) is non-flammable (ISO-10156). This is called typically a sniffing test. The handprobe connected to the microelectronic hydrogen sensors is used to check the object. An audiosignal increases in proximity of a leak.