HyStorPor - Hydrogen Storage in Porous Media

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Geosciences

Abstract

Increasing reliance on intermittent renewable electricity sources makes balancing supply to demand difficult. This will become increasingly challenging as the proportion of renewables increases into the future. One solution is the large-scale geological storage of energy in the form of hydrogen. Electricity generation from stored hydrogen can balance summer to winter seasonal energy demands, with the added potential for hydrogen to repurpose the gas grid and replace methane for heating. This is significant as the heating of buildings is currently the largest source of carbon emissions in the UK, exceeding those for electricity generation.

However, the underground storage of hydrogen in porous rocks has not yet been demonstrated commercially. This project hence uses state-of-the-art laboratory experiments to address questions which require insight before commercial trials occur, focusing on the geological (underground) storage of hydrogen in geographically-widespread porous rocks. Storage of hydrogen underground is well established in caverns of halite (salt). However, in the UK this type of geology is restricted only to Teesside, Northern Ireland and Cheshire, with long and costly transport to consumers elsewhere. Methane gas in the UK is already stored underground onshore in porous reservoirs and offshore in re-purposed natural gas fields, and that provides insight to operational designs and challenges. The project partners have expertise in hydrocarbon reservoirs, geological assessment of CO2 storage, and compressed air energy storage using porous rocks.

WP1 Hydrogen reactivity examines whether the hydrogen could react chemically with the rocks into which it is injected or the overlying seal rock, which could prevent the gas from being recovered and used. Controlled laboratory experiments with hydrogen injection into porous rock at subsurface temperatures and pressures will identify and quantify likely chemical reactions.

WP2 Petrophysics assesses how effectively hydrogen migrates through water-filled porous media, and how much of the injected hydrogen can actually be recovered from the rock. Because the rock is made of solid grains with a network of pore spaces between, capillary forces naturally trap some of the hydrogen. How much is trapped affects the commercial viability of the whole process. Laboratory-based experimentation will inject hydrogen into rock samples to help answer this question. CT scanning provides live 3D images of the hydrogen retention in the rock pores.

WP3 Flow simulation uses digital computer models of fluid flow adapted from hydrocarbon simulation to scale up from laboratory experiments to an underground storage site. Hydrogen reactive flow properties from WP1 and WP2 will be used to calibrate numerical fluid flow software codes. These models can calculate how efficiently the hydrogen can be injected, and predict how much of the hydrogen can be recovered during operation. Volumes and types of cushion gas to be left in the reservoir as a precaution to maintain operation pressure and minimise water encroachment during withdrawal periods will also be assessed.

WP4 Public perception considers how societal familiarity with hydrogen may be much lower compared to natural gas. A key objective of the project is to ascertain at an early stage how citizens and key opinion shapers feel about hydrogen storage underground, and to engage civil society with the research and development process to ensure that hydrogen storage develops in a way that is both technically feasible and socially acceptable.

WP5 Project management, industry advisory board, communication and outreach are essential in this type of project. Digital updates will be posted on a dedicated project website and social media channels, with presentations made at academic and industry events. Public project reports and, eventually, peer reviewed publications will provide an open access record of project progress.

Planned Impact

The HyStorPor project will have significant impact during and after its completion as it lays the fundamental scientific foundations for commercial hydrogen storage in the subsurface. Large-scale geological storage of hydrogen offers the potential to balance inter-seasonal discrepancies between demand and supply; and decouple energy generation from energy demand and decarbonise the energy system. If burned for heating, hydrogen could reduce the carbon emissions of the largest source of carbon emissions in the UK. Hydrogen generated from renewable electricity has the potential to accelerate the UK towards a low-carbon energy system and provide a substantial improvement in energy security. The project will increase understanding of the whole hydrogen system, from fundamental processes to social acceptability. The outputs and ongoing dialogue will be coordinated through a new multidisciplinary research centre and information hub on hydrogen usage and storage, based at the University of Edinburgh.

The project outcomes will enable policy makers and commercial developers to appreciate the likelihood and nature of the geological storage of hydrogen by increasing the UK-relevant evidence base. The improved understanding of the processes, capacity and integrity of storage sites will assist regulators in managing the environmental risks arising from the geological storage of hydrogen, delivering effective industry regulation and environmental protection. A backdrop of ethical and cultural factors informs societal perception of future energy technologies, such as hydrogen storage, and as such, it is vital to avoid assumptions about public concern and to engage early on to understand what shapes perception of alternative energy options. Iterative dialogue and accessible information presented in a straightforward way from the beginning of the project will inform industry and the public.

The project will engage opinion-shaping citizens in dialogue on how hydrogen storage may affect daily living, both in terms of immediate effect of technologies on the built environment, and also its fit into a future low-carbon society for the beginning of the project. The outcome of this will be a "socially acceptable" consultation processes and proposed regulations for assessment and integration of societal concerns for future hydrogen storage deployment, in order to ensure it is governed in a way that respects and is responsive to societal concern. Independent of industry and regulators, we will feed into the public debate on what needs to be done to achieve "safe and responsible" geological hydrogen storage.

This proposal will assist the nascent hydrogen energy industry by providing developers with scientific understanding of commercial hydrogen storage in the subsurface that will enable them to both understand the science associated with their activities and to communicate the benefits to the regulators and to the public. We expect that early industry benefiters to be those involved with currently proposed hydrogen schemes, such as the H21 Leeds City Gate project and the H100 project, and collaboration with our advisory board will ensure dissemination directly to industry, enabling our early-stage research a pathway to market within the UK.

The scientific outputs of the proposal will benefit the international academic community by furthering scientific understanding of geological hydrogen storage in the areas of reactivity and multiphase flow based on experimental benchmarking and integrated modelling. This multi-disciplinary project will be the first of its kind and the results from HyStorPor will be integrated into Masters-level teaching, ensuring that the next generation of energy and industrial professionals have a sound understanding of the viability and significance of geological hydrogen storage.

Outputs will be made available using metadata portals for data and by giving the datasets "doi" labels to facilitate referencing.

Publications

10 25 50
publication icon
Heinemann N (2019) Low-carbon GeoEnergy resource options in the Midland Valley of Scotland, UK in Scottish Journal of Geology

publication icon
Thaysen E (2021) Estimating microbial growth and hydrogen consumption in hydrogen storage in porous media in Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews

publication icon
Scafidi J (2021) A quantitative assessment of the hydrogen storage capacity of the UK continental shelf in International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

publication icon
Mouli-Castillo J (2021) A quantitative risk assessment of a domestic property connected to a hydrogen distribution network in International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

publication icon
Mouli-Castillo J (2021) A comparative study of odorants for gas escape detection of natural gas and hydrogen in International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

publication icon
McMahon C (2023) Natural hydrogen seeps as analogues to inform monitoring of engineered geological hydrogen storage in Geological Society, London, Special Publications

publication icon
Miocic J (2023) Enabling secure subsurface storage in future energy systems: an introduction in Geological Society, London, Special Publications

 
Description Hydrogen is not geochemically reactive with typical sandstones available for use as underground reservoirs. Microbes can have an important and rapid effect to consume hydrogen and CO2 gases injected into sandstone proespace. For the first time, we have been able to image hydrogen gas moving through sandstone pores - and measure fundamental petrophysical properties such as relative permeability, contact angles, and wettability. These may become globally useful data sets. Additionally this project has laid foundations for further work to identify and understand sites of hydorgen storage in salt caverns and in a previously unrecognised application of storage sites ro re-engineer and re-purpose depleted gas fields for storage of hydrogen in the microscopic porespace which previously held methane.
Exploitation Route • National scale and Europe wide development of hydrogen storage in geological porespace at massive scale - up to 33% of a member state annual energy requirements (not just electrcity - but also heat and transport)
• Storage of hydrogen is a low carbon vector compatible with UK Net Zero ambition, and EU Fitfor55 ambition in 2030 and Net Zero in 2050
• Storage of hydrogen enables wind power to become not strended or spilled power generation, but make and store commercial hydrogen when electricity demand is less than production.
• Storage of energy at low cost and with geographic wide spread is the under-recognised but essential partner to renewables in a national energy system free of hydrocarbons.
Sectors Chemicals,Energy,Environment

URL https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/hystorpor/category/news/
 
Description Improved confidence in UK and in EU energy system planning - that storage of hydrogen (blue or green) for national energy supplies can be - feasible in porous geology, can be commercially viable, and can be capable of widespread development across thew UK and across many EU member states
First Year Of Impact 2020
Sector Energy
Impact Types Societal,Policy & public services

 
Title Relative permeability of hydrogen and aqueous brines in sandstones and carbonates at reservoir conditions: Data sets 
Description The article describing the data set has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Relative_permeability_of_hydrogen_and_aqueous_brines_in_sandst...
 
Title Relative permeability of hydrogen and aqueous brines in sandstones and carbonates at reservoir conditions: Data sets 
Description The article describing the data set has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Relative_permeability_of_hydrogen_and_aqueous_brines_in_sandst...