| dc.description.abstract |
Hydrogen has emerged as a zero-emission solution for light to heavy-duty transport
as well as various stationary applications. Type IV composite overwrapped pressure
vessels (COPVs) are standardized to store gaseous hydrogen (H2) at a nominal working
pressure (pnwp) of up to 70 MPa or more so as to achieve a competitive driving range
for commercially available hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicles (HFCEVs) and hydrogen
internal combustion engine vehicles (HICEVs). As per various national and international
standards, Type IV COPVs are tested up to the burst pressure (pb) which is around 2.25
times of pnwp to provide a sufficient factor of safety for regular operations at pnwp.
Although Type IV COPV for H2 storage has been standardized and commercialized,
there are several challenges associated with it such as high cost, limited temperature
range of usage, safety, etc. which are linked to the materials, design, and manufacturing
processes used to fabricate these COPVs. Therefore, a good understanding of the role
of materials used for their manufacturing, design along with the manufacturing defects
on their failure behavior under critical operational conditions of high-pressure H2 is
absolutely necessary. Materials used for manufacturing Type IV COPV include hydrogen
embrittlement resistant metals used for the manufacturing boss (required for holding
the gas valve), a suitable grade of polymer used for manufacturing liner to control the
H2 permeation, and carbon fiber-reinforced plastic (CFRP) that has a suitable matrix
material along with the suitable grade of fibers as reinforcement to provide the required
strength for holding high-pressure H2. Design aspects of COPVs include length to
diameter ratio, shape of dome section and coupling of metallic boss with polymeric liner.
Manufacturing defects on the other hand, can include defects in the polymeric liner, gaps at
the interface of various components of COPV, sharp thickness variation in CFRP winding,
etc. These defects are known to cause several kinds of failures in Type IV COPVs that
include buckling of the liner, reduced pb, leakage of gas, as well as an overall reduction in
the operational life.
To gain a competitive edge on Type IV COPVs, simulation-assisted manufacturing
technologies must be developed to reduce test requirements, boost production rates, and
reduce rejections or failures under service conditions. To improve such understanding, in
this thesis, at first a small Type IV COPV with an internal water volume of 18 liter is
designed progressively using netting analysis, classical laminate theory, and finite element
analysis, to elucidate the role of various design parameters and defects responsible for its
failure at the pb. The failure behavior of Type IV COPV is found to be highly sensitive
to the placement of the CFRP lay-up, the outer shape of the metallic boss that interacted
with the CFRP winding while the junction points of the liner, boss, and CFRP winding
are shown to be the hot spots for failure. Lastly, failure prevention strategies at these hot
spots are discussed in terms of the CFRP failure criteria. Next, a novel modeling framework is developed and implemented using UMATHT
(user-defined material with heat transfer) subroutines in the commercial FE solver Abaqus.
UMATHTisusedtosolve the H2 permeation equation, following the analogy between heat
transfer and the diffusion equation. The variation in hydrogen transport properties in liner
material based on the morphological properties of polymer with applied pressure has been
implemented in the model to investigate the H2 permeation mechanism. The developed
modeling framework is first calibrated w.r.t experimental data available in the literature,
and thereafter, the model with calibrated constants is extended to simulate the optimal
thickness of liner material for a 70 MPa pnwp Type IV COPV.
Lastly, to explore the mechanism of H2 permeation and failure based on pre-existing
micro-defects in the polymeric liner material, two defect cases are considered for analyzing
the role of defects in polymer liner and at liner-composite interface under filling-defilling
cycles of Type IV COPVs. A quarter model of the cross-section of cylindrical part of
the Type IV COPV with both the defects incorporated is subjected to an operational
f
illing and defilling cycle typically associated with Type IV COPV. A multi-variable H2
permeation analysis is conducted using the extended governing equations of Fick’s law
for hyper-elastic polymeric liner material and defilling-induced blistering model. Filling
is carried out up to 70 MPa in 5 minutes, and maintained for several hours, then fast
defilling is carried up to a minimum pressure up to 2 MPa as followed in realistic situations.
Simulation results provide an understanding of H2 pressure build-up inside defects during
the filling and defilling cycle clearly highlighting the effect of location of micro-defects on
damage initiation under operational conditions of Type IV COPVs. |
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