1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

66
1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005

Transcript of 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

Page 1: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

1

Selectingan ERS

Design Basis

SACHE WorkshopGary Van Sciver

September 20, 2005

Page 2: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

2

EmergencyReliefSystem

RuptureDisk

Reactor

Page 3: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

3

Vessel Overpressure

Page 4: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

4

1999 Allentown, PA 5 fatalities high concentration and temperature of hydroxylamine

Concept Sciences

Page 5: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

5

Hazardous Release

Page 6: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

6

Phillips

Pasedena, Texas 1989 23 fatalities

Vapor cloud explosion of ethylene and other gases

Explosion occurred ~ 2 minutes after release started

Page 7: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

7

Bhopal

Union Carbide 1984 2,500 fatalities

large ERS release of methyl isocyanate

Page 8: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

8

Venting Policy:

ERS must protecton-site people AND

off-site people

Page 9: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

9

Balance:

Economics

Off-siteRisk

On-siteRisk

$

Page 10: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

10

What is aDesign Basis?

Page 11: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

11

Design Basis:

Simple way to express system capacity

Page 12: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

12

FailureScenario

Page 13: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

13

Fire Scenario

Page 14: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

14

Runaway Scenario

Page 15: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

15

Failure Scenario: Series of events leading to high

vessel pressure.

Page 16: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

16

How high?

Page 17: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

17

Codes require that the maximum pressure not

exceed the vessel design pressure

Page 18: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

18

Design Basis:

Most severe failure scenario which

complies with the Codes.

Page 19: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

19

How do we do it?

Page 20: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

20

Procedure:

1. Identification  

2. Selection

Page 21: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

21

1. Identification

(of all important failure scenarios)

Page 22: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

22

ideas

Page 23: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

23

Non-reactiveSystems

Page 24: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

24

Product Tank Example

RD

Heating/Cooling

From Reactor

Page 25: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

25

Non-Reactive Checklist

1. Heat addition a. Normal breathingb. Firec. Excessive heating 

2. Pressurized liquid addition   3. Pressurized gas addition

Page 26: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

26

1a. Normal breathing(atmospheric temperature and pressure changes)

RD

Heating/Cooling

From Reactor

Page 27: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

27

1b. Fire Exposure

RD

Page 28: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

28

1c. Excessive heating(steam valve failures, coil leaks)

RD

Steam wide open

Page 29: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

29

2. Pressurized liquid addition(usually accompanied by some flashing, especially if hot)

RD

Liquid

Page 30: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

30

3. Pressurized gas addition(line blowing, pressure transfers, pads or purges)

RD

Air, Nitrogen or Steam

Page 31: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

31

ReactiveSystems

Page 32: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

32

Is there an exothermic or gas-generating

reaction?

Page 33: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

33

Generic Emulsion Compatibility Matrix

activator

bactericide

catalyst

chain transfer agent

miscellaneous additive

monomer

neutralizer

preform

promoter

soap

water

Page 34: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

34

Reactive Chemistry Worksheet

developed by EPA and NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

http://response.restoration.noaa.gov/chemaids/react.html

Page 35: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

35

Page 36: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

36

OSHA Chemical Reactivity Website

http://www.osha.gov/dep/reactivechemicals/

Page 37: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

37

Bretherick’s

Handbook of Reactive Chemical

Hazards

Page 38: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

38

LabExperiments

Page 39: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

39

Emulsion Reactor Example

Reactant

Catalyst/Activator

Miscellaneous

CoolingWater

TIC

Page 40: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

40

NormalReaction Checklist

1. Inadequate cooling 2. Inadequate heat sink 3. Excessive reactant 4. Poor reactivity

Page 41: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

41

Coolingwaterfails

1. Inadequate cooling

Page 42: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

42

Water NOTcharged

2. Inadequate heat sink

Page 43: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

43

Reactant

Bypass open

3. Excessive reactant (continuous)

Page 44: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

44

3. Excessive Reactant (batch)

 

Reactant

Page 45: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

45

Agitator offReactant

4. Poor reactivity

Page 46: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

46

Abnormal Reaction Checklist

1. Too hot

2. Wrong composition

Page 47: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

47

1. Too hot

Page 48: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

48

2. Wrong composition

Page 49: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

49

System ________________

1. Non-Reactive Scenarios

1a. Normal Breathing

1b. Excessive Heating

1c. Fire Exposure

1d. Liquid Addition

1e. Gas Addition

2. Normal Reaction Scenarios

2a. Inadequate Cooling

2b. Inadequate Heat Sink

2c. Excessive Reactants Fed

2d. Excessive Reactant Buildup

3. Abnormal Reaction Scenarios

3a. Too Hot

3b. Wrong Composition

Apply?

XXX

Description & Size

XXXXXXXXXXX

XXX XXXXXXXXXXX

Page 50: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

50

2. Selection

(of a design basis from the important failure scenarios)

Page 51: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

51

Selection Approaches:

A. Codes/StandardsB. Tradition/AnalogyC. Risk

Page 52: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

52

List scenarios by ERS size

Page 53: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

53

Example Scenario List:

1. Liquid filling2. Fire case3. Half charge runaway4. Full charge runaway5. Full charge runaway

without water heel

Page 54: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

54

A. Codes/ Standards

Page 55: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

55

NFPA 30 requiresERS protection against

fire exposure

Page 56: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

56

B. Tradition/ Analogy

Page 57: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

57

Traditional Designs

Non-reactive: Fire Case Reactive: Full-charge

Runaway

Page 58: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

58

Traditional DesignExample of Traditional Design

1

10

100

1000

100 1,000 10,000 100,000

Monomer Volume

Page 59: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

59

ERS Database

Page 60: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

60

C. Risk

Page 61: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

61

Probability

of

consequences

Page 62: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

62

Consequences

Page 63: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

63

Probability(of high vessel pressure)

Page 64: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

64

Fenceline

Process

Offices

Neighbors

Hospital

Plot Plan

Page 65: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

65

Fenceline

Process

Offices

Neighbors

Hospital

Risk Contours

Page 66: 1 Selecting an ERS Design Basis SACHE Workshop Gary Van Sciver September 20, 2005.

66

On-site Risk - once per 40,000 years

Off-site Risk - once per 100,000 years

Rohm and Haas Risk Criteria