Publication | Closed Access
ASME Section VIII Recertification of a 33,000 Gallon Vacuum-Jacketed LH2 Storage Vessel for Densified Hydrogen Testing at NASA Kennedy Space Center
17
Citations
1
References
2015
Year
Unknown Venue
Hydrogen Energy TechnologyEngineeringEnergy ConversionCryogenic RefrigeratorThermal Energy StoragePressure VesselEngineering ThermodynamicsDensified Hydrogen TestingRefrigerationEnergy Storage MaterialsFluid PropertiesStorage SystemsThermodynamicsEnergy StorageHydrogen UtilizationHydrogenHeat TransferGas StorageThermal EngineeringAerospace EngineeringThermal HydraulicsCryogenicsDensification OperationsLiquid Hydrogen
The Ground Operations Demonstration Unit for Liquid Hydrogen (GODU-LH2) has been developed at NASA Kennedy Space Center in Florida. GODU-LH2 has three main objectives: zero-loss storage and transfer, liquefaction, and densification of liquid hydrogen. A cryogenic refrigerator has been integrated into an existing, previously certified, 33,000 gallon vacuum-jacketed storage vessel built by Minnesota Valley Engineering in 1991 for the Titan program. The dewar has an inner diameter of 9.5’ and a length of 71.5’; original design temperature and pressure ranges are −423°F to 100°F and 0 to 95 psig respectively. During densification operations the liquid temperature will be decreased below the normal boiling point by the refrigerator, and consequently the pressure inside the inner vessel will be sub-atmospheric. These new operational conditions rendered the original certification invalid, so an effort was undertaken to recertify the tank to the new pressure and temperature requirements (−12.7 to 95 psig and −433°F to 100°F respectively) per ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, Section VIII, Division 1. This paper will discuss the unique design, analysis and implementation issues encountered during the vessel recertification process.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1