Industries

Battery Storage - Gas Detection & Monitoring

Continuous gas monitoring designed for utility-scale battery energy storage systems (BESS).

As energy storage systems grow in capacity and density, gas detection becomes a critical part of maintaining safety and operational reliability. Early detection of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and volatile organic compounds prevents thermal runaway events and protects personnel, equipment, and infrastructure.

Real-time monitoring of gas concentrations can be broken into designated zones:

  • Cell Room 1 — Hydrogen (H₂)
  • Cell Room 2 — Carbon Monoxide (CO)
  • Inverter Bay — Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
  • Thermal Stack — Hydrogen Sulfide (H₂S)

Thresholds and trends are constantly evaluated to trigger automated ventilation, isolation, and alarms where required.

Site Overview & Safety Procedures

Detection Strategy
Deploy multi-gas fixed monitors in battery rooms, inverter bays, and HVAC plenums. Combine catalytic bead, electrochemical, and LEL sensors depending on gas type and concentration range. Integration with BMS and SCADA ensures coordinated safety response.

Immediate Actions on Alarm

  • Evacuate non-essential personnel.
  • Isolate the affected battery string and activate ventilation systems.
  • Initiate emergency shutdown if elevated levels persist.

 

Battery Storage — Gas Detection & Monitoring

Why gas detection matters

Unplanned gas releases cause injury, ill health, fires, explosions and production downtime. UK employers have legal duties under DSEAR (Dangerous Substances and Explosive Atmospheres) and COSHH to manage risks from hazardous gases.
An engineered gas detection system forms part of a layered defence: identify, detect, alarm, isolate and evacuate.

Applications:

MTI Fixed Gas Detection Specialists in the UK

Our approach

Survey, design, deliver, support

Site survey & hazard mapping

Identify fugitive emission points, process vents, confined spaces and likely release directions.

Specification & zoning

Select sensor types and certify equipment to match DSEAR/ATEX zones and COSHH requirements.

Installation & integration

Fixed detectors, control panels, BMS/SCADA integration and alarm management.

Commissioning & verification

Calibration, functional tests and documented acceptance tests.

Maintenance & training

Scheduled calibration, sensor replacement, alarms testing and operator training.

Types of sensors & when to use them

Sensor placement & coverage - practical guidance

Regulatory snapshot (UK)

DSEAR — requires risk-based controls for explosive atmospheres.
COSHH — requires monitoring and control of hazardous exposures where applicable.
ATEX/IECEx — equipment certification for hazardous zones.

Employers must assess, document and implement measures including gas detection where appropriate.

Quality & standards

Systems are designed to recognised standards and best practice: BS/EN guidance for gas detectors and control panels, site-specific acceptance tests and documented maintenance regimes.

Key services

Maintenance, calibration & lifecycle

A gas detector is only useful if it works when you need it.
Implement a written maintenance plan covering periodic calibration (or bump tests), sensor replacement, alarm checks and record-keeping.
Maintain traceable calibration certificates and keep a log of alarm events and corrective actions.

Recommended checks:

  • Bump test before use (portable) or weekly checks for fixed systems depending on risk.
  • Full calibration at manufacturer-recommended intervals, or when readings drift.
  • Battery and communications checks for wireless devices.
  • Functional testing of alarm outputs, relays and integration with shutdown systems.

Typical system architecture

From field sensors to control and action: sensors junction boxes control panel / PLC / safety system operator HMI & alarms SCADA/BMS logging.
Modern systems offer data logging, remote telemetry and secure cloud-based dashboards for compliance reporting and trend analysis.

Example features:

  • Multi-channel control panels with redundant relays
  • Event logging and time-stamped alarm histories
  • Remote telemetry (4–20mA, Modbus, BACnet, IoT gateways)
  • Operator access levels and audit trails

FAQs

Not always — you must perform a risk assessment. For continuous processes with significant gas inventory or explosion risk, fixed detectors are usually required.

Follow manufacturer guidance and the site risk assessment — typical intervals are 3–12 months. Perform bump tests more frequently.

Yes — common protocols include Modbus, 4–20mA and BACnet. Ensure cybersecurity and fail-safe behaviour are considered in the design.

Contact & next steps

Ready to secure your factory with a compliant gas detection system?
We offer site surveys, bespoke system design and full lifecycle support. Tell us about your facility and hazards and we’ll propose a practical solution.

Add Your Heading Text Here