报告题目: Statistics, lessons learn and recommendations from analysis of HIAD 2.0 database(基于氢气事故数据库2.0分析的统计数据、经验教训和建议)
报告人:Jennifer Wen(英国萨里大学教授)
报告时间:2023年11月1日15:00—17:30
会议方式:29号楼3楼大会议室
欢迎广大师生踊跃参加!
机械与汽车工程学院
2023年10月24日
报告摘要:
The Hydrogen Incidents and Accidents Database (HIAD) is an international open communication platform collecting systematic data on hydrogen-related undesired events (incidents or accidents), which was initially developed in the frame of HySafe, an EC co-funded Network of Excellence in the 6th Frame Work Programme by the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission (EC-JRC). It was updated by JRC as HIAD 2.0 in 2016 with the support of the Fuel Cells and Hydrogen 2 Joint Undertaking (FCH 2 JU). Since the launch of the European Hydrogen Safety Panel (EHSP) initiative in 2017 by FCH 2 JU, the EHSP has worked closely with JRC to upload additional/new events to HAID 2.0 and analyze them to gather statistics, lessons learn and recommendations through Task Force TF3. The first report to summarize the findings of the analysis was published by FCH 2 JU in September 2019. Subsequently, the EHSP and JRC have continuously worked together to enlarge HAID 2.0 with newly occurred events as well as quality historic events which were not previously uploaded to HIAD 2.0. This has facilitated the number of validated events in HAID 2.0 to increase from 272 in 2018 to currently 566; and the overall quality of the published events has also been improved whenever possible. Recently, EHSP has analyzed the lessons learn and recommendation from the newly added events which were consolidated before July 2020 and conducted statistics analysis. While an updated report is being prepared by EHSP based on this analysis, this presentation summarize the key findings.
报告人简介:
Jennifer Wen is currently a professor and doctoral supervisor in the School of Mechanical Engineering Sciences, University of Surrey. Prior to this, she was a Professor at the University of Warwick for nearly 10 years, where she established and led Warwick FIRE, a multidisciplinary research laboratory for both fundamental and applied research in fire, explosions and other safety-related reactive and non-reactive flows. Jennifer also held positions at Computational Dynamics Limited (founding vendor of STAR-CCM), British Gas plc, South Bank University and Kingston University London, where she was a full professor since 2000 and Head of Research for Engineering from 1999-2012.
Jennifer is a Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. She is Vice-Chairman of the International Association for Fire Safety Science (IAFSS) and chairs the IAFSS Research Sub-Committee. She is a Steering Committee Member of the British Section of the Combustion Institute, UK Explosion Liaison Group, and member and Sub-Task Leader for the European Hydrogen Safety Panel (EHSP), established by the Clean Hydrogen Joint Undertaking of the European Commission. Jennifer currently sits on the Editorial Board of the Proceedings of the Combustion Institute.
Jennifer’s research covers a wide range of topics including fire dynamics, flame spread, facade fires, battery fires, glazing behaviour in fires, and gas explosions. Her expertise is primarily in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling of fire and explosions. She has applied fundamental combustion science to study a wide range of fire scenarios including liquid pool and gas burner fires, single and multi-phase jet fires, flame spread over solid and liquid fuels, façade fires, and fires in buildings and tunnels. Her expertise further extends to fire and explosion safety in emerging energy technologies, especially hydrogen and batteries.