Basic Principles of Fuel Cell Safety The fuel cell engine uses hydrogen (directly, or indirectly produced from other fuels) to electrochemically produce electrical power. The hazards of fuels, electrical power, machinery, etc. are well understood and addressed by multiple safety standards and codes for fuel cells and their fuels. The important safety categories that apply to fuel cell power systems are: Flammability, Hazardous material, Ventilation, Mechanical, Electrical, and Electromagnetic. Fuel cells do not employ radioactive components or materials, nor produce ionizing radiation. The following categories are addressed by codes and standards for product safety: o Flammability - Flammable Gas and Liquid - safety concerns: potential fire, explosion risk o Protection against fire or explosion hazard addressed by FC 1 for stationary fuel cell systems and FC 3 for portable applications, and repeated in NFPA 853. o Fire prevention, pressure relief, and leakage containment or venting of fuel storage per NFPA 2, 30, 55, 58, 853. o Hazardous Material - safety concerns: inhalation, skin exposure, oral poison, etc. o Occupational Health & Safety Organization (OSHA) per Code of Federal Regulations 29, Part 1910 (29CFR1910). o Ventilation and Make-up air - safety concerns: potential asphyxiation, removal of excess heat o room ventilation & fuel supply ventilation per OSHA (29CFR1910) and International Building Code (IBC) o NFPA853 ventilation requirements for fuel cell power systems. o Mechanical - safety concerns: personal injury hazard due to contact with moving parts (fans & louvers), compressed gas o Addressed by FC 1 & FC 3: physical inspection & protection (IEC/ANSI/NEMA 60529 rating: IP2x for indoor or outdoor applications). compliance to NFPA 79 for machine safety. o compressed gas rupture risk is addressed by International Fuel Gas Code (reflected by state fire codes), and NPFA 55. o Electrical - safety concerns: shock hazard, discharge hazard, possible ignition source. hazardous voltages, currents, energy - if touched, insulation & critical spacing to prevent accidental discharges & resulting molten material, and possible ignition sources for flammable gas. o Addressed by FC 1 & FC 3 for power generator compliance to IEC/UL 60950-1 for electrical spacing & insulation. o Installation per NFPA 70, especially Article 692 for fuel cell systems. o Electromagnetic - safety concerns: unexpected interference and loss of safety controls due to Radio Frequency (RF) energy RF radiated emissions (ElectroMagnetic Compliance - EMC) o EMC: RF radiated emissions are addressed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) per Code of Federal Regulations 47, Part 15. June 27, 2014