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![]() "Peter Skelton" wrote in message ... On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 17:03:49 +0100, "Keith Willshaw" wrote: Oh come on Peter. There are LPG lines all over the dammed place on any refinery and a major leak is bloody hard to contain. The regulations must be drastically different over there. LPG cant read Go and look at the report on what happened at Flixborough I have, in detail, often, with access to a lot that isn't generally available. Yeah right, I only read the official report and work on reliability and failure studies for a living, what would I know ? More than you it seems since I knew the full extent of the damage. (I can think of much worse scenarios, but not ones started by a bulldozer that begins outside the fence. They start with operator or maintenance error compounded by control room error.) In the case of the Flixborough accident in the UK a pressure vessel was bypassed by the maintenance dept using pipes and bellows units. Unfortunately the bypass was not properly anchored and a slug of liquid caused the bypass to tear loose. Flixborough happened in 1974. At that time, I was employed by DuPont at Maitland ON, a plant that has a very large Cyane oxidation unit so we had passing interest in the event. IIRC, they were using a temporary bypass that had been constucted without engineering assistance. A slug of process fluid, caused by a process upset, tore a bellows that was improperly installed. Gee I just said that No, you blamed the accident on failure to anchor a bypass. Which is functionally identical to what you posted. Did you even read it ? There was no automatic shut-off upstream. The plant lacked modern process controllers[3] and was, even by standards of the day, not centrally controlled. Quite so , not that it would have helped much It would have ended the fire within fifteen minutes. Only if it were still functional after the initial explosion, given the scale of the damage done by what was to all intents a 50 ton FAE thats unlikely. The issue is moot however since the major damage was done by the initial explosion The explosion was 15 tons equivalent of the BLEVE [1] type, the fire lasted days becuase about 10% of the plant inventory had to be allowed to burn out [2]. There was minimal effect past the fence. Wrong. Even though the explosion occurred on a rural site 53 members of the public received major injuries and hundreds more sustained minor injuries. The plant was destroyed as were several others on the same site and close to two thousand houses, shops, and factories were damaged with some 3000 residents being left homeless No part of the plant met modern standards. There are plenty of 1970's pterochem plants still out there and the best control system in the world doesnt help when you dump 50 tons of Cyclohexane into the environment. There aren't may fifties plants out there and there aren't any at all that will dump fifty tons of cyane from a pipe rupture. There are lots of plants built in 60's and 70's The causes of the event were internal to the plant. The process affected was obsolete and hazardous at the time and recognized as such. A bulldozer tearing open a line would have had the same effect. How do you get the bulldozer to the line? How you ever actually seen a pipe trench ? Then how do you get the line to dump much more than its contents? Have you ever calculated how much Cyclohexane a 14" line 1000 m long contains ? Try it , just for kicks. And who still oxidizes cyane outside a collum? It was cyclohexane and its widely used in the production of Nylon, and any leak is highly likely to oxidise externally. The situation you describe is nothing like this. In your case vapour burns as soon as it finds an oxidizer, mixing is not possible. Shut-offs would function automatically and limit the amount of fuel. There will be no big bang, although there would be one hell of a whoosh. You are assuming no coincident or consequential damage occurs, this is a POOR assumption. What structures are being weakened by that flame and what happens when they fail. No an awfull lot. That's what the controlls are about. Controls dont stop steel losing its structural strength in a fire BTW, I'm assuming the builldozer doesn't get far into the plant. It's not all that easy to do here. Bull**** Peter, all that protects most plant are earth bunds and chain link wire fences It is such risks that are rarely analysed and often provide the nasty shock when an incident occurs One of the worst industrial Bleve's happened on a french plant where a small fire started at a faulty valve. Trouble is the flame impinged on a LPG storage sphere BANG You've still not dealt with the basic question. Which is whether there was a chemical plant near the incident that was so grossly mis-constructed and mis-managed as to be vulnerable to such an attack. I responded to a claim that it couldnt happen - IT CAN The furnace scenario you chose shows little understanding of explosions or chemical plants. Really , care to dispute the facts ? The plant you chose is ludicrously different from existing types. Peter I have worked in this industry since I was 16, I have seen 2 major Petrochemical incidents and investigated many others. One of those included a major fire and explosion caused by a mobile crane striking a pipe bridge. Go find your Granny and teach her to suck eggs. The CPI is not immune to accident. There have been many, there will be more but this is a low-probablility scenario. In the case at question, calling in an air strike because of the possibility that the bulldozer might enter a chemical plant and do mischief, I'll stick with what they decided to do. So will I but that doesnt eliminate the potential risk from a bulldozer or any other piece of heavy plant. Keith |
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