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Understanding the role of process chemistry in fires and explosions
Author(s) -
Mannan M. Sam,
Aldeeb Abdulrehman A.,
Rogers William J.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
process safety progress
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.378
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 1547-5913
pISSN - 1066-8527
DOI - 10.1002/prs.680210409
Subject(s) - exothermic reaction , process safety , thermal runaway , process (computing) , work (physics) , biochemical engineering , chemistry , process engineering , hazard , work in process , computer science , engineering , mechanical engineering , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , power (physics) , operations management , physics , battery (electricity) , operating system
Chemical incidents involving fires and explosions cannot be prevented just through command and control regulatory requirements. Prevention requires understanding the fundamental root causes of safety incidents. When heat generated by an exothermic reaction exceeds the heat removal capability of the system, the exothermic reaction will accelerate and may lead to a thermal runaway reaction, explosion, and fire. Understanding the role of process chemistry as a root cause of fires and explosions in the chemical process industry requires knowledge of the maximum quantities of both energy and gas generated by the primary and secondary exothermic reactions. Also, rates of energy and gas production are of utmost importance. This data is usually gathered by experimental methods. Experimental thermal analyses can provide an overall reactivity evaluation, but are often unable to explain the reaction mechanisms needed for safe process chemistry. Moreover, experimental analyses of all reaction pathways are expensive and sometimes impractical. This paper provides a structured approach to chemical reactivity hazard evaluation using computational methods coupled with experimental techniques. This systematic approach helps to minimize experimental work, identifies the most important parameters in evaluating process fire and explosion hazards, and provides a more comprehensive understanding of process chemistry. A reactive system involved in selected industrial fires and explosions is analyzed to test the validity of this systematic approach. Providing a better understanding of the reactive system chemistry, and reducing the experimental work were among the main objectives of this study.

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