Pressure sensors for hydrogen applications must address material compatibility, seal suitability and leak tightness — in addition to pressure range and explosion protection. A sensor approved for ATEX IIC or rated to 700 bar in another medium is not automatically suitable for hydrogen service. This guide covers the key selection criteria and leads into the sensor selector.
Hydrogen presents unique challenges for pressure measurement that go beyond standard process instrumentation. The combination of very small molecule size, high diffusivity, high pressures and potential embrittlement of certain materials requires careful selection of sensor type, wetted materials and seals — independent of the explosion protection requirements.
Hydrogen can diffuse into and embrittle certain steels, particularly high-strength steels. Wetted materials must be verified for hydrogen service at the specific pressure, temperature and hydrogen purity conditions.
Hydrogen refueling and storage systems operate at 350–700 bar and above. Sensors must be rated for the full system pressure including pressure surges. Verify burst pressure and fatigue life for cyclic applications.
Hydrogen molecules are extremely small and can leak through joints and seals that would be tight with other gases. Verify seal material compatibility and leak tightness specification for hydrogen service.
Hydrogen is typically treated as gas group IIC for ATEX/IECEx hazardous-area classification. IIC marking addresses ignition classification, not material compatibility. North American projects may require FM/CSA/UL hazardous-location approvals instead.
| Application | Typical pressure range | Key requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrogen refueling stations (350 bar) | 0–500 bar | Hydrogen material compatibility, high-cycle fatigue, leak tightness, fast pressure transients. Refueling protocols such as SAE J2601 may influence pressure and cycling requirements. |
| Hydrogen refueling stations (700 bar) | 0–1000 bar | Hydrogen material compatibility, high-cycle fatigue, leak tightness, pressure transients and suitable high-pressure connection concept. |
| Electrolyser systems | 0–100 bar | High-purity H₂, corrosive media (KOH or PEM), material compatibility |
| Hydrogen storage (stationary) | 0–500 bar | High-pressure rating, long-term stability, hydrogen embrittlement resistance |
| Fuel cell systems | 0–10 bar | High purity, low leak rate, compact format, electrical isolation |
| Pipeline and distribution | 0–100 bar | Hazardous-location approval, HART or digital diagnostics, verified wetted-material compatibility |
| Criterion | What to check |
|---|---|
| Wetted materials | Wetted materials must be selected for the specific hydrogen service conditions, including pressure, temperature, purity, moisture, contaminants and cyclic loading. Austenitic stainless steels, nickel alloys or other compatible materials may be used depending on the application. Avoid assuming compatibility from material name alone; request material declarations and verify suitability with the manufacturer for the specific service conditions. |
| Seal materials | Seal materials must be verified for hydrogen permeation, pressure, temperature and decompression behaviour. PTFE, PEEK, metal seals or selected elastomers may be used depending on the design and pressure level. Do not assume seal compatibility without supplier confirmation for the specific hydrogen service conditions. |
| Pressure rating | Verify the nominal range, overpressure rating and burst pressure. For refueling applications, verify high-cycle fatigue life. Pressure surges during valve actuation must be within the overpressure rating. |
| Hazardous-location approval | For ATEX/IECEx classified areas, verify gas group IIC, zone classification, protection concept and temperature class. For North American installations, verify the required FM, CSA or UL/cULus approval. Hazardous-location approval does not confirm hydrogen material or seal compatibility. |
| Leak tightness | Specify and verify the required leak rate and test method for the hydrogen application. Threaded, welded, flanged or metal-sealed connections have different leakage risks. For high-pressure hydrogen, verify the complete pressure boundary and connection concept with the manufacturer. |
| Output signal | 4–20 mA and HART are common for process and safety applications. IO-Link and analogue outputs for integrated systems. Verify electrical isolation requirements for fuel cell applications. |
A sensor rated to 700 bar for hydraulic oil or nitrogen is not automatically suitable for hydrogen service. Wetted materials, seal materials and housing must all be separately verified for hydrogen compatibility at the specific pressure, temperature and purity conditions.
ATEX or IECEx approval with gas group IIC confirms that the sensor meets explosion protection requirements for the most severe gas groups, including hydrogen. It does not confirm that the wetted materials, seals or housing are compatible with hydrogen as a process medium.
Refueling and storage applications involve many pressure cycles over the sensor lifetime. Verify the sensor's rated number of pressure cycles and fatigue life, not only the nominal pressure range.
Marketing references to hydrogen service, fuel cells or hydrogen-ready applications do not necessarily define the approved pressure range, wetted materials, leak rate or fatigue capability. Verify the specific hydrogen service conditions covered by the manufacturer documentation before specifying.
Verify before specifying: Always confirm wetted material compatibility, seal material suitability, pressure rating including overpressure and fatigue life, and ATEX/IECEx approval scope against the manufacturer specifications and the applicable hydrogen application standard. Pressure Selector provides a shortlist for further evaluation — it does not replace engineering review or certification assessment.
For promising matches, use Request Info on any result to prepare a supplier inquiry based on your application requirements.
Pressure Selector converts application requirements — such as hydrogen compatibility, pressure range, wetted materials, ATEX/IECEx IIC approval and output signal — into a structured shortlist of candidate pressure sensors for further evaluation.
Coverage includes selected pressure transmitters and sensors with hydrogen application coverage from manufacturers such as SSI Technologies, Kistler, Parker, TE Connectivity and others. Availability of verified hydrogen material compatibility and specific approval combinations depends on the selected series and configuration. Always verify material suitability with the manufacturer for the specific hydrogen service conditions.