A fire broke out on the vacuum distillation unit in a refinery during its shutdown. The unit had been restarted the day before following the acceptance of the work, while other job sites were still underway at the site. The reheating operation had begun during the night, and the unit was still in the power build-up phase. At around 9.15 am, thick black smoke was observed coming from the stack (fire in the furnace), with flames shooting from the open explosion vents. This situation was preceded by hammering in the pipes and rising pressure in the tower increase and the opening of valves: hydrocarbons began spilling outside. Following the inquiry, it appears that erroneous level indicators caused the tower to be overfilled then the backflow of liquid into the furnace via the vacuum system (backflow of incondensable materials). A brief summary of the findings: the local levels were not visible, the chain associated with the control levels in the bottom of the tower had not been completely checked (card), and the configuration of the system and notably the extraction levels were not correct.
Source: Aria ACCIDENT ANALYSIS OF INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION