April 30, 2025

Natech incident - chlorine tank lifted due to flooding

4 tanks with 80 m3 storage capacity for liquefied chlorine in a store housing 5 tanks. The tanks contained different amounts of chlorine with some containing only gaseous chlorine as a residue after discharging, and some being filled up to 20% of their capacity. Each chlorine tank was located in a concrete basin designed to retain the entire tank contents.

This tank with a capacity of 80 m3 was involved in the chlorine release on 23 August 2002.

Description

After being flooded with water exceeding the 'hundred year water level' by 1.3 m, the empty and less filled tanks were lifted by the buoyancy forces according to Archimede's law and displaced from their normal positions. The upwards movement of the tanks deformed and lifted the walkways situated above the tanks.

The safety fittings of the full tank got caught in the walkway and were completely torn off as the walkway kept moving upwards. As a consequence of the valves being torn off from the full tank, a massive leakage of chlorine occurred.

 The plant had implemented 100-year anti-flooding measures. However, the flood exceeded the 100-year flood by 1.3 m, and the severity of the flood was not forecast by authorities and was hence not expected by the plant.

Lessons Learned

Lessons Learned on Equipment

After the accident, a guide-rail structure for vertical guiding of the tanks was installed. This will avoid unwanted horizontal motion of the tanks in case of displacement. This measure was accompanied by a segmentation of the walkways which will move together with the tanks in case of floating.

Lessons Learned on Organisational Aspects

Chlorine storage was reduced to 50% of the capacity before the accident and therefore to one storehouse only, thereby significantly reducing the accident risk.

Also, prior to each scheduled shutdown of the sodium hypochlorite plant, chlorine is removed from the manifolds and pipelines, and before each scheduled power outage or disruption of cooling water supplies, the pipeline connecting the tanks in the storehouse must be disassembled.


April 26, 2025

Partial leakage of hydrochloric acid due to earthquake

 About 11:35 on December 17th, 1987, a strong earthquake occurred during usual operation of a vinyl chloride monomer plant. The substation was stopped by a malfunction of an over-current relay due to the earthquake during emergency shutdown operation. Although the emergency power generator started, fluctuations of cooling water caused by the earthquake were incorrectly interpreted as a fall of a liquid level. The emergency power generator was stopped immediately by an interlock that mistook an abnormality with cooling water. Following the total power failure, the alkali circulation pump of the absorber stopped, and the gas was discharged.

Read the incident in this link

April 22, 2025

Leakage and fire of hydrogen during exchange of a dehydrogenation catalyst at an alkylbenzene manufacturing plant

A catalyst in the dehydrogenation reactor, which usually was operated under hydrogen atmosphere, was changed with separating the reactor and its peripheral part from the slightly pressured part by closing a 20-inch remotely controlled valve. The hydrogen pressure of the peripheral part was set at 20 KPaG, and the reactor was opened to the atmosphere. Considering some hydrogen leakage, suction from piping was done with a vacuum device and, in addition, nitrogen sealing was performed. In piping restoration work after changing the catalyst, flames spouted from the clearance of the flange and two workers got burnt. The cause of the fire was mal management of the method of catalyst changing.

Read about the incident in this link

April 18, 2025

Fire at an acetylene hydrogenation section on rapid re-startup after an emergency shutdown at an ethylene plant

On July 7th, 1973, an explosion and a fire occurred at an acetylene hydrogenation section of T factory ethylene plant of I petrochemical company. Because of a restart error after an emergency shutdown, there was an error in hydrogen feed control. As excessive hydrogen was injected and it hydrogenated ethylene, the reactor reached a high temperature. In addition, there was an exothermic ethylene decomposition reaction. A large fireball (60 m in diameter, duration time 5 seconds) was produced by an explosion of 1200 kg of ethylene.

Read about the incident in this link

April 10, 2025

Burst of a phenolic resin reactor due to abnormal reaction

 Raw materials were charged into the reactor that manufactured dihydroxydiphenylmethane by a reaction of phenol with formaldehyde at night on the previous day. By putting in the catalyst in the morning of the day, the contents were heated to the fixed 80 °C, and heating was stopped. However, the temperature continued to rise, so cooling was attempted, but a runaway reaction occurred. As a result, the internal pressure of the reactor increased and the reactor burst. One operator was injured. Although the cause cannot be specified, it is supposed that the temperature was raised too high initially, agitation was started while the temperature was rising, and vapor pressure was increased because cooling water piping was blocked, and so on.

Read about the incident in this link

April 2, 2025

Safety Critical Task Analysis (SCTA)

"Human activities are involved in different aspect of operation of a chemical facility. Starting from design, construction, commissioning, operation, maintenance till decommissioning, human is involved. For safe and reliable operation, high human reliability is required in all phases of lifecycle of the facility. However human errors have contributed to many major industrial accidents in Chemical facilities in the past. Few examples are listed" in this link

March 28, 2025

Explosion caused due to a catalytic effect of contaminant in the reactor at a resin intermediate manufacturing plant

  "An explosion occurred at a plastic intermediate plant. Raw material was decomposed explosively by contaminant on heating and agitating after charging the raw material into the reactor. The reactor exploded and a fire occurred. Due to imperfect valve operations during vacuum distillation work for a previous run, sodium hydroxide for exhaust gas neutralization flowed in reverse to the reactor. As this alkali became a catalyst, a runaway reaction occurred. "

Read about the incident in this link

March 12, 2025

“Even a simple task can turn deadly if it is not performed properly,”

"The accident took place in July 2021 at the LyondellBasell Industries complex in La Porte, near Houston, in the acetic acid production unit. The facility is the third-largest acetic acid producer in the US. The CSB’s report found that the inadvertent removal of pressure-retaining components of a valve caused the release of nearly 75,000 kg of an acetic acid mixture. The incident killed two contract workers, severely injured a third, and sent some 29 others to hospital.


“Even a simple task can turn deadly if it is not performed properly,” CSB Chairperson Steve Owens says in a press release. The incident involved a common plug-valve system, and CSB found similar serious incidents in which these valves were taken apart when removing connected equipment."

Read the article in this link

March 8, 2025

How to prevent runaway chemical reactions - EPA

" PROBLEM: Many industrial chemical processes involve exothermic (heat generating) reactions. Uncontrolled, or runaway, reactions can occur as a result of various situations, such as mischarged raw materials, failure of a reactor's cooling system or the presence of contaminants. If the heat generation exceeds the reactor's ability to remove it, the reaction can accelerate - or run away - and cause the temperature and pressure to increase. A sudden energy release from such an uncontrolled reaction has the potential to harm workers, the public, and the environment. The following Case Study aims to increase awareness of possible hazards connected with exothermic reactions."

Read the article in this link 

March 4, 2025

Runaway reactions

"A typical runaway scenario involves reactants being charged into a reactor at room temperature and heated with stirring until the reaction temperature is reached. Temperature is held constant to optimise cycle time and yield. On completion, the reactor is cooled and emptied. However, if no provision is made in the process to account for cooling failure at reaction temperature e.g. due to power failure or operator error (forgot to start the stirrer), etc. then unconverted material still present in the reactor may react at an uncontrollable rate proportional to the amount of unreacted material. This may lead to over-pressure in the vessel and subsequent rupture by virtue of the normal reaction exotherm. Alternatively, a secondary decomposition reaction may be initiated and the heat so produced may lead to yet a further increase in temperature and eventual runaway conditions1 . The prime causes of runaways are associated2,3 with – process chemistry – inadequate design – substandard operational procedures – lack of training – raw-material quality control – temperature control – agitation – mischarging of reactants – maintenance – human factors (which may impact all of the foregoing)".

Read the article in this link 

February 28, 2025

Accident due to agitator lubricating fluid entering reactor

 "This report investigated the causes of a chemical release accident caused by an abnormal reaction and recommended certain safety steps to prevent the reoccurrence of similar accidents. An abnormal reaction occurred during the input of raw materials (t-BuOH, KMnO4, and H2O), and some foreign impurities (4% MeOH, 13% glycerin) that may have influenced the reaction were identified. The MeOH may have entered the reactor during t-BuOH reuse or the cleaning of mechanical parts, and glycerin was released from the seal oil reservoir to enhance lubrication with the agitator in the reactor. The pilot test carried out to reproduce the abnormal reaction revealed a rapid reaction, with an increase in the mixture temperature when the KMnO4 and glycerin (13%, released from the broken seal oil reservoir) were added to the mixture that contained 96% t-BuOH and 4% MeOH (impurity). Furthermore, some deficiencies in the safety system and some human errors were discovered. The reactor was not equipped with either a safety instrumental system or an automated emergency shutdown system, and the workers did not wear PPE. These factors could have had a significant impact on the accident".

Read the report in this link 

January 28, 2025

Hazard Alert: Combustible Dust Explosions

 Source:OSHA.Gov

Hazard Alert: Combustible Dust Explosions
Combustible dusts are fine particles that present an explosion hazard when suspended in air in certain conditions. A dust explosion can be catastrophic and cause employee deaths, injuries, and destruction of entire buildings. In many combustible dust incidents, employers and employees were unaware that
a hazard even existed. It is important to determine if your company has this hazard, and if you do, you must take action now to prevent tragic consequences 

See the link....

https://www.osha.gov/sites/default/files/publications/osha3791.pdf

January 24, 2025

DUST EXPLOSIONS CAN BE CAUSED SUBSTANCES YOU WOULD NEVER IMAGINE!

Source: OSHA.Gov: 

Does your company or firm process any of these products or materials in powdered form?
If your company or firm processes any of these products or materials, there is potential for a “Combustible Dust” explosion

https://www.osha.gov/sites/default/files/publications/combustibledustposter.pdf

January 20, 2025

Sulhur dust explosion

At 2:15 a.m. on September 17, 2019, an employee was emptying a supersack of sulfur into a bin at a tire manufacturing facility. The sulfur in the bin ignited and caused an explosion, causing the bin door to be blown open. The employee incurred burns to his face and arms from the explosion and torn ligaments in his legs as a result of the bin door striking him. The employee was hospitalized. 

 Source:OSHA.Gov

January 16, 2025

Thermal expansion of DMS caused incident

At 11:30 a.m. on June 20, 2007, Employees #1, #2, #3, and #4, who worked for Scaffolding Company, and Employees #5, and #6, who worked for Plant Services Company, and Employees #7 and #8, who worked for a chemical manufacturer, were hospitalized after being exposed to dimethyl sulfate (DMS) in the ethoxylation area where it was used in reactors 4 and 5. 

Employee #7 was an operator who moved bags containing chemicals into the area in order to add it to reactor 4. Employee #8 was a mechanic that worked unplugging an auger at reactor 4. Employees #7 and #8 started working at 7 a.m. at reactor 4. 

Employees #1, #2, #3, and #4 dismantled a scaffold at a platform at the reactors. 

 Employees #5 and #6 removed and installed new insulation on piping at a platform at the reactors. The host employer did not become aware that employees were exposed to DMS until about 2 p.m., when workers were discovered having chemical burns. Employees worked on a raised platform around the two reactors. In order to enter and leave the area, they walked along a path between two the reactors that was only 30 inches wide, and a pipe that contained DMS which ran overhead between the reactors. The piping system normally operated at 5 psi, but thermal expansion of DMS caused pressures over 300 psi and caused a valve on the overhead pipe to leak this extremely hazardous compound down onto employees that worked beneath the pipe. 

Source:OSHA.Gov

January 12, 2025

Turbine exhausts are HOT!

 On April 5, 2012, Employee #1 was handling an exhaust leak from a turbine on the site of a power plant. The task involved the placement of a piece of insulation blanket over the pipe expansion bellow system, which contained the exhaust leak. The leak was of hot air, which was approximately 600 to 700 degree F. It was emanating from a section of pipeline located on the exhaust waste heat recovery system. While Employee #1 was dealing with the leak, he inhaled the hot air exhaust and injured his lungs. He was transported to a medical center. At the medical center, Employee #1 underwent treatment and was hospitalized. 

 

Source:OSHA.Gov