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Metrology Partnership project on standardisation of hydrogen fuel sampling successfully completed

Hydrogen refuelling station

Improving hydrogen refuelling stations for heavy-duty transport to cut carbon dioxide emissions

Hydrogen can play a key role in reducing emissions in the transport sector, particularly for long-haul heavy-duty vehicles. However, wider adoption requires further standardisation. To ensure the gas quality of the hydrogen meets requirements, reliable sampling of the gas at refuelling stations is crucial. While sampling systems previously existed for light-duty vehicles, there was limited evidence for heavy-duty applications.

Recently completed Metrology Partnership project Metrology to support standardisation of hydrogen fuel sampling for heavy duty hydrogen transport (22NRM03, MetHyTrucks) addressed this gap by developing:

 

  • sampling systems for gaseous species and particulates adapted to HD conditions

  • validation protocols for sampling systems

  • sampling representativeness guidelines

  • uncertainty assessments for sampling

  • safety and venting protocols

Publications available as a result of the work of the project include:

The results were disseminated to standardisation bodies including ISO/TC 197 Hydrogen technologies and CEN/TC 268 Cryogenic vessels and specific hydrogen technologies applications.

Project coordinator Karine Arrhenius from RISE said

‘MetHyTrucks delivered the first comprehensive technical evidence base for standardising hydrogen fuel sampling in heavy-duty transport, including validated methodologies, uncertainty evaluation, and identified challenges related to dynamic refuelling conditions.’

In addition to supporting long-term climate change targets, hydrogen buses and heavy-duty vehicles will improve air quality and provide health benefits as only water is emitted from the tailpipes; this will prevent people from breathing in carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide emissions, and it will reduce the frequency of pollution peaks.

This Metrology Partnership project has received funding from the European Partnership on Metrology, co-financed by the European Union Horizon Europe Research and Innovation Programme and from the Participating States


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