On 6 August, 2012, a catastrophic loss of containment occurred on an 8-inch diameter piping associated with the gas-oil side-draw on an atmospheric crude distillation column in a refinery. The pipe ruptured, releasing flammable hydrocarbon process fluid to the environment. The flammable liquid partially vaporized into a large vapor cloud engulfing nineteen employees. After two minutes the flammable portion of the vapor cloud ignited. All of the employees escaped, narrowly avoiding serious injury.
Key learning points
The underlying cause of the pipe rupture appears to be poor maintenance procedure in regard to mechanical integrity. Subsequent testing determined that the rupture was due to pipe wall thinning caused by sulphidation corrosion. In fact, over a period of nearly 35 years, the 52-inch long piping component had lost on average, 90 percent of its original wall thickness in the area near the rupture. Although the company employed experts in sulphidation corrosion, they were not consulted on any key decisions associated with potential sulphidation risk of the crude distillation unit. The crude distillation unit is one of the processes most associated with sulphidation corrosion in petroleum refineries. However, the process hazard analysis of the crude unit did not consider the potential for sulphidation corrosion. The pipe in question was made of carbon steel which had a tendency to corrode from sulphidation faster than typical higher chromium-containing steels. In addition to that, carbon steel also experiences significant variation in corrosion rates due to possible variances in silicon content, a component used in the steel manufacturing process. Carbon steel piping containing silicon content less than 0.10 weight percent can corrode at accelerated rates, up to 16 times faster than carbon steel piping containing higher percentages of silicon. This should be considered in the risk assessment
Source:IChemE