SAE AIR8466

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Hydrogen Fueling Stations for Airports in Both Gaseous and Liquid Form

Published by Publication Date Number of Pages
SAE 2024

SAE AIR8466 – Hydrogen Fueling Stations for Airports in Both Gaseous and Liquid Form

The purpose of this AIR is to establish a baseline for hydrogen fueling protocol and process limits for both gaseous and liquid hydrogen fueling of aircraft (eCTOL eRotor eVTOL LTA) at the airport from small aircraft to wide-body. A further goal is to harmonize and establish common aircraft fueling safety definitions wherever possible with other SAE and EUROCAE standards and NFPA codes alike.

Hydrogen fueling process limits (including the fuel temperature the maximum flow rate time required etc.) are affected by factors such as ambient temperature fuel delivery temperature and initial pressure in the hydrogen storage system. The further goal is to establish basic fueling protocols within these limits as a starting point while evaluating minimum criteria including evaluation of fueling with or without communications. AIR8466 establishes the protocol and process limits for hydrogen fueling of aircraft and plans to establish fueling protocols starting with small aircraft. Optionally communications may be used and a general description will be included.

Gaseous hydrogen fueling and liquid hydrogen fueling at cryogenic temperatures are two very different types of fuel stored in different types of vessels with safety mitigations. The goal is to start with an all-encompassing AIR for hydrogen fueling both gaseous and liquid and after publishing establish a family of documents covering categories of fueling as determined by the SAE AE-5CH team.

To minimize storage volumes compressed hydrogen gas stored under pressure up to 700 bar (70 MPa) achieves 39.5 kg per m3 or as a cryogenic liquid 20 K achieves 71 kg per m3. Other methodologies of liquified hydrogen such as subcooled liquid or cryo-compressed offer the potential for higher storage densities (the latter is not covered in this document).

Figure 1 compares the volumetric and gravimetric densities of hydrocarbon fuels as well as the most common hydrogen storage methods in liquid and gaseous hydrogen and three types of hydrogen storage with different hydrogen density versus phases pressure and temperature (gaseous hydrogen liquid hydrogen and cryo-compressed).

Presently there are established codes and standards for ground vehicles at SAE ISO NFPA etc. that could also be applicable to some applications for hydrogen at the airport. While there are some existing fuel cell and hydrogen standards for aerospace (such as SAE/EUROCAE information reports) there is a need to create new fueling station standardization efforts which are outlined herein. The volume of hydrogen required will depend on the pressure and phase (ambient gaseous or cryogenic liquid) and the size of aircraft. Therefore a series of ground standards will be required to cover the phase thermal and pressure variables.

Product Details

Published:
11/11/2024
File Size:
1 file 2.7 MB
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