Clean hydrogen production is seen as an essential part of the global transition to more sustainable energy sources and helping to reduce carbon emissions for end-use applications such as industrial feedstock and transportation fuel. But producing and handling hydrogen safely and efficiently requires precise control of flow and pressure, which is where control valves play a key role.
If you want to learn more about the role control valves play in hydrogen electrolysis, storage and transportation, as well as the key considerations for specifying hydrogen control valves, this article is for you.
Green hydrogen is produced through electrolysis—a process that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen—using electricity from renewable energy sources like wind or solar power. This contrasts with grey hydrogen and blue hydrogen, which uses steam reforming or gasification of fossil fuels in its production.
Control valves control the supply of water to the electrolyzer, ensuring there’s a consistent reaction for maximum hydrogen output. They also regulate the removal of oxygen and hydrogen gases, preventing pressure imbalances that could reduce efficiency or damage equipment.
Hydrogen has to be stored at high pressures. It also has small, highly mobile molecules that can leak easily and is extremely flammable. So it’s vital that every component in the system that transports and stores hydrogen is reliably robust as well as precise in its operation over time to prevent leaks, pressure surges and system failures.
Control valves play a key role in preventing these issues by adjusting flow rates and stabilizing pressure to ensure safe hydrogen handling. During transportation—whether through pipelines, tankers, or storage tanks—control valves help prevent over-pressurization which would lead to dangerous leaks. In storage, control valves regulate hydrogen release to maintain the integrity of the system and prevent sudden pressure drops that could impact downstream service.
Hydrogen production, transportation and storage aren’t new applications for industrial automation. But the level of investment, scale and end-use application innovation is new and challenging.
Fortunately, they’re challenges we’re used to working with at Trimteck, thanks to our experience with another demanding use case—aerospace testing applications. So these are the considerations you’ll want to include when specifying your hydrogen control valve:
We precision-engineer and manufacture custom specialty control valves for various hydrogen applications, including proton exchange membrane (PEM) and alkaline electrolyzers, hydrogen compression and storage and ammonia-to-hydrogen conversion.
If you’d like to learn more about our experience with and commitment to industrial automation for the hydrogen industry, visit our dedicated hydrogen industry page for more detail and technical brochures.