Hydrogen leak testing
Hydrogen leak testing is the normal way in which a hydrogen pressure vessel or installation is checked for leaks or flaws. There are various tests.
- The Hydrostatic test, The vessel is filled with a nearly incompressible liquid - usually water or oil - and examined for leaks or permanent changes in shape. The test pressure is always considerably more than the operating pressure to give a margin for safety, typically 150% of the operating pressure.
- The Burst test, The vessel is filled with a gas and tested for leaks. The test pressure is always considerably more than the operating pressure to give a margin for safety, typically 200% or more of the operating pressure.
- The Helium leak test, The leak detection method uses helium (the lightest inert gas) as a tracer gas and detects it in concentrations as small as one part in 10 million. The helium is selected primarily because it penetrates small leaks readily, is inert and will not react with the test piece and also has a natural low quantity in air making detection less complicated. It is possible to detect leaks as small as 5.10-10 pa m3/s in vacuum mode and modern digital machines can detect 5.10-10 pa m3/s in sniffing mode.
- Usually a vacuum inside the object is created with an external pump connected to the instrument.
- Alternatively helium can be injected inside the product while the product itself is enclosed in a vacuum chamber connected to the instrument. In this case Burst and leakage tests can be combined in one operation.
- The Hydrogen sensor, 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. Detection of leaks go down to 5x10-7 cubic centimeters per second . Compared to the helium test: hydrogen is cheaper than helium, no need for a vacuum, the instrument could be cheaper but is not as sensitive as a helium leak detector so will not find smaller leaks.
See also
- Hydrogen analyzer
- Hydrogen piping
- Hydrogen safety
- Tubing (material)
- Hydrogen station
- Tracer-gas leak testing method
External links
- Leakpedia - The free wiki encyclopedia about the industrial leak testing
- Fibre gratings for hydrogen sensing
- Wide-Range Hydrogen Sensor
- Wireless sensor
- / Hydrogen leak tester
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