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Integrating hydrogen production and subsurface storage: toward a sustainable hydrogen economy: a critical review

水素製造と地下貯蔵の統合:持続可能な水素経済に向けた批判的レビュー (AI 翻訳)

Shuangshuang Lin, Xin Chang, Shimin Liu

GeoEnergy Communications📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-04-08#水素Origin: Global
DOI: 10.1007/s44421-026-00017-6
原典: https://doi.org/10.1007/s44421-026-00017-6
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本レビューは、水素製造と地下貯蔵の統合に関する最新知見を整理。塩空洞や枯渇油ガス層など地質媒体の貯蔵可能性と、ガス-岩石-ブライン相互作用やキャップロック健全性などの課題を分析。ブルー、グリーン、オレンジ水素の各製造経路と貯蔵技術の連携を評価し、AIや光ファイバーセンシングの活用が将来の鍵と指摘。

English

This critical review synthesizes knowledge on integrating hydrogen production and subsurface storage for a sustainable hydrogen economy. It covers geological storage options (salt caverns, depleted reservoirs, aquifers) and key challenges such as gas-rock-brine interactions, caprock integrity, and microbial methanogenesis. The review links blue, green, and orange hydrogen pathways with storage technologies, highlighting AI and fiber-optic sensing as future enablers. Case studies from the US, Europe, and Asia confirm technical feasibility but note monitoring and economic hurdles.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本は水素基本戦略で大量貯蔵技術の確立を掲げており、本レビューは地下貯蔵の実装課題を包括的に整理。特に枯渇ガス田や帯水層の評価は、日本の地質条件に応用可能な知見を提供する。

In the global GX context

This review provides a comprehensive global overview of geological hydrogen storage, relevant for countries like the US and Europe advancing large-scale storage projects. It synthesizes technical challenges and emerging monitoring technologies, offering a benchmark for international hydrogen economy roadmaps.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a state-of-the-art synthesis of geomechanical, geochemical, and microbiological processes in hydrogen storage, identifying research gaps.

🏢実務担当者:Offers a technical overview of storage options and operational challenges for hydrogen project developers and energy companies.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights strategic importance of geological storage for hydrogen economy, informing national energy storage policies and infrastructure planning.

📄 Abstract(原文)

For energy transition and energy innovation, hydrogen has emerged as a pivotal clean energy carrier bridging renewable generation and industry-scale decarbonization. As renewable penetration increases with known spatio-temporal fluctuations, the ability to store energy over days to seasons becomes a critical limitation to energy system resilience. Integrating multi-sourced energy into existing infrastructure therefore demands efficient, safe, and cost-effective energy storage solutions across the supply chain. Among available options, underground geological storage represents a viable large-scale, long-duration technology capable of balancing seasonal energy fluctuations. Hydrogen’s low molecular weight, high diffusivity, and reactivity present both opportunities and challenges for secure storage, while surface-based methods such as compression, liquefaction, and adsorption remain constrained by cost, capacity, and scalability. Subsurface formations, including salt caverns, depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs, coal seams, aquifers, and abandoned mines, offer vast potential storage capacity but require detailed understandings of coupled geomechanical, geochemical, and microbiological processes that govern hydrogen injection, storage and recovery. Gas–rock–brine interactions, caprock integrity, cushion gas dynamics, and microbial methanogenesis significantly affect hydrogen retention and operational efficiency. This review synthesizes the state of knowledge on hydrogen storage through geological media, integrating scientific, engineering, and environmental perspectives while coupling storage technologies with emerging hydrogen production pathways—blue, green, and orange hydrogen—derived respectively from fossil reforming with carbon capture, renewable-driven electrolysis, and geological stimulation such as serpentinization. Case studies from the United States, Europe, and Asia confirm the technical feasibility of underground storage yet highlight persistent challenges in long-term monitoring, leakage prevention, and economic optimization. Looking forward, the incorporation of artificial intelligence (AI), distributed acoustic fiber-optic sensing, and reactive transport modeling will enhance real-time assessment and system design. Collectively, these developments affirm that large-scale geological hydrogen storage is not merely a technical option but a strategic necessity for achieving a secure and decarbonized global hydrogen economy.

🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース

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