Why are hydrogen compressors important for refuelling?
Hydrogen refuelling stations typically take gas hydrogen from a source, whether that is an electrolyser at low pressure (typically around 30 bar), pipeline at low to medium pressure (typically 50-80 bar) or supplied by a compressed hydrogen delivery asset at medium to high pressure (typically 200 bar to 500 bar).
In all cases, the hydrogen usually needs to be compressed further to the required pressure, ready for refuelling, and held in local storage units. The lower the supply pressure, the greater the requirement on the compression to boost the pressure up to the required refuelling pressure.
This is where Haskel's world-leading compression technology comes in.
There are two main pressures that that are most common in the industry, 350 bar and 700 bar. The 700 bar refuelling applications require a higher pressure dispensing because these vehicles only feature a finite space for fuel storage. The more gas you can put into the vehicles’ onboard storage system, the greater range the vehicle will have.
350 bar pressure is typically used for heavy duty vehicles and 700 bar for lighter vehicles. Over time we expect heavy duty vehicles to move into the 700 bar category to give those vehicles a greater range.
The gas compression element of a refuelling station is integral in allowing you to achieve the refuelling pressures at those higher levels.
Read more in our blog - Hydrogen refuelling stations and the role of gas compression technology | Haskel
