There are many different designs of Gas tank for hydrogen. This fuel is managed by the Car companies who are experimenting with it as a fuel, and I have seen the Carbon fibre tanks they need to use - Very heavy for not a lot of real energy capacity.
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/100...c5bd71e4ef3b049c20016da20d8&afSmartRedirect=y
But when I needed to install a Hydrogen gas feed system into a Laboratory, I learned some of the issues of Hydrogen.
The molecules of Hydrogen are small - so small that "Normal" materials that hold fuels and gases do not always contain Hydrogen. In fact the helium molecules (about 4 times bigger than Hydrogen) are used 100% as the leak test gas for fuel tanks for petrol etc. Hydrogen can (and will) permeate through most membranes of rubber, plastic, some metal welds, etc. - hence the heavy and expensive careful manufacture of tanks for hydrogen. ANY welded steel tank - or pipework, fittings, etc. - must be professionally made by someone certified appropriately for making the welds for Hydrogen equipment.
We had to use a special certified and trained contractor to do the lab pipework for Hydrogen, because that was the law. They are rare and expensive experts.
Some stuff I have not read, but may enlarge upon what you can do with Hydrogen.
https://cms.law/en/int/expert-guides/cms-expert-guide-to-hydrogen/united-kingdom
ASME B31.12
The problem with Hydrogen.
It simply explodes!
In a combustion engine, explosions cause very high peak pressures (shock waves), so necessarily things have to be heavier and stronger than with a "regular" fuel that burns with a flame front. - Thus increasing pressure over the time it takes to transmit the initial point of combustion (the spark, etc.) to the far corners of the combustion chamber. This is a short time, and rapid combustion, but not the peak pressure achieved when hydrogen and air mix. - This has taken car makers decades to work-out and overcome, and yet there are still no real signs of Hydrogen becoming road fuel... just vague forecasts. - I know guys who worked on the Hydrogen fuelled cars for about 20 years, and reckon they have a job for life!
Another problem with Hydrogen - In air, with any source of ignition, it simply explodes! And because the molecules of Hydrogen are so small, almost any joint (even where 2 welds meet on a steel tank) can leak, and the ensuing gas cloud is a bomb waiting to go off..
BUT with seamless stainless steel tubing, compression fittings, certified welded (steel) pressure vessels, or other proprietary vessels for hydrogen, it can be made to be safe (-ish?). Or so they though about the Hindenburg...?
SO please take care... Hydrogen really is "rocket science fuel"... Don't take my word for it, read about it in "Professional papers" on the Web. There is plenty to read!
https://www.eprg.net/fileadmin/EPRG_Dokumente/FR-221_2020_Literature_study_hydrogen.pdf
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