Computational Estimation of Protection Wall Height Impact on Hydrogen Explosion Consequences
Publié en ligne: 16 août 2025
Pages: 418 - 432
Reçu: 20 mars 2025
Accepté: 03 juin 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/rtuect-2025-0028
Mots clés
© 2025 Yurii Skob et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The purpose of the study is to determine numerically the height of a wall designed to protect people from the negative effects of a blast wave, ensuring a specified level of safety. An accidental explosion of a hemispherical hydrogen-air stoichiometric cloud is considered. Near the epicenter of the accident, a person is subjected to shock-impulse loading as the blast wave front passes. A protective wall is installed between the accident’s epicenter and the person’s location to mitigate the explosion’s impact on human health. The wall’s transverse size (width) is sufficiently large to ensure that it does not affect the safety of a person whose location remains unchanged. The required height of the protective wall can be determined by solving an inverse problem in gas dynamics, focusing on the movement of a multi-component mixture of hydrogen combustion products through the surface layer of the atmosphere at the accident site. The gas flow disturbed by the explosion collides with the wall barrier, partially reflects off the wall, and moves around it in a vertical longitudinal plane, exerting a baric effect on a person. Solving the combined gas-dynamic and safety problem of human damage by a blast wave helps determine whether the current height of the protective wall is sufficient to ensure a safe level of conditional probability of human damage. A series of computational experiments were conducted for different heights of the protective structure using the mathematical model of a gas explosion and probit analysis. As a result, the relationship between the conditional probability of human injury and the vertical size of the wall was established in the form of a plot. Using this plot, a safety expert can determine the required wall height to ensure a sufficient level of human safety in the event of a hydrogen explosion accident.