Showing posts with label Runaway reactions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Runaway reactions. Show all posts

April 27, 2017

Thermal decomposition incident

At approximately 9:15 p.m., in a sealant adhesive manufacturing plant, a mixer producing an epoxy adhesive overheated causing thermal decomposition. The smoke from the mixer filled most of a 3000 sq. ft. production room. The Fire alarm was pulled by an operator outside of the production room. The fire department arrived on scene and took control as Incident Command and called for a shelter-in-place of surrounding neighborhood. Initially, about a 4-block radius around plant was blocked to any traffic. By about 10:20pm, the fire department reduced the blocked off area to only the plant perimeter. A representative from the Emergency Response section responded to the scene and verified that there were no chemical release issues.
The fire department relieved pressure off the mixer and then set up additional exhaust fans to air out the production room, and after getting readings of less than 10 parts per million Carbon Monoxide the Fire Department gave the all-clear, which was about 12am. There was no explosion, no fire and no environmental release and the fire department did not use any extinguishing agents. 

Contribute to the surviving victims of Bhopal by buying my book "Practical Process Safety Management"

January 24, 2011

Lab accident - the dangers of chemicals

A chemical accident in a lab in India that went wrong has again pointed out the dangers of accidents in labs. Two girls were injured when an uncontrolled reaction took place. Treat your lab and R and D facilities with the same respect as your plant! Read the artcile in this link.

September 19, 2010

Running blind - the dangers of reactive chemistry

There is a lot of ignorance about reaction hazards in the batch processing industry. As long as incidents do not occur, operators of reactors that handle reactive chemicals seem to think that it will never happen to them. The fallacy is that we seem to think that big reactors are safe as they look strong! It is the other way around in reactive chemistry! If you do not know the sizing basis of your cooling/condensing systems, your vent/scrubber systems and details of the reactions you are handling, you are running blind! Read a basic article on dangers of reactive chemistry in this link.

August 27, 2010

Water and reactive chemicals = fire

A warehouse with old stored toxic chemicals has reportedly caught fire in Ukraine. The cause of the fire is due to rain water entering the warehouse and reacting with the chemicals stored and causing fire.
How well are your chemical warehouses protected from the elements?
Read the full article in this link.

August 11, 2010

Dangers of chemical reactions

Unexpected chemical reactions are dangerous and can kill.Whenever a new product is envisaged, it must be taken through a proper management of change process, including understanding of process chemistry.Even though this incident happened in 2008, it underscores the importance of knowing what you are doing. Read about the incident in this link.
More recently, another accident occurred at a chemical factory at Ankleshwar where two people died. Read about the incident in this link.

August 1, 2010

Safety valves and runaway reactions

I was participating in a HAZOP study of a reactor where a runaway reaction was possible.There was a serious discussion about the reaction kill system, when one of the participants asked what the operators will do if a runaway reaction occurs. The operations chief who was participating immediately answered - run away!He had witnessed an actual runaway reaction in which the reactor started rumbling, gaskets blew, safety valve lifted,and the operators ran away. Know the design basis of your safety valves. This is important for management of change and for writing operating procedures.

May 1, 2010

Process safety in batch operations

What goes around comes around! As far as process safety incidents in batch process go, I sometimes despair whether we will ever learn from previous incidents. Last year I had investigated some batch process incidents, the causes of which are very very familiar - incompatibility,scale up issues, heat removal issues, MSDS issues and raw material storage issues. For those of you working in the batch process industry, the UK Chemical Reaction Hazards Forum is a good place to get information on batch incidents. Share these incidents with your operating personnel and check whether it could happen in your organization. For further details go to this link.

February 13, 2010

Runaway Reactions - Run away if you do not have data!

A runaway reaction is an uncontrolled reaction that does not stop. It can cause catastrophic consequences like rupture of reactors and release of toxic gases. The understanding of reactive chemistry plays a big role in avoiding runaway reactions. Avoid the mistake of scaling up from R & D to plant production without understanding all the details of the reactions and its side reactions. The effect of change in operating parameters and batch recipe or quantity must also be understood. Recently a speaker at a seminar mentioned that many batch processes in India are being operated without complete knowledge of the reaction chemistry. I have also investigated number of incidents involving runaway reactions where operators were operating the batch without proper information on reaction kinetics.There are various scientific tools available to determine these data. Accelerating rate calorimeters, differential scanning calorimetry etc are some of them. Just because you have not experienced a runaway reaction incident, do not be complacent. The only hope of survival in a runaway reaction incident is to run away!
Watch this excellent CSB safety video on the hazards of reactions.