An ammonia leak occurred at a commercial-industrial facility. Approximately 10 lbs ammonia entrained in approximately 200 litres of compressor oil was released when a suction side 3/8-inch pressure sensing line failed. The suction side oil pressure pushed approximately 200 litres of oil from the reservoir onto the floor where the entrained ammonia then escaped to atmosphere. The 3/8-inch stainless steel tubing within the compression fitting failed when a circumferential crack completely fractured. The crack within the
3/8-inch stainless steel compression fitting did not show up on external inspection. Metal fatigue appeared to be a factor, along with unit vibration and initial metal stress within this type of compression joint.
The refrigeration contractor identified the main cause and factors leading to the failure as a severe vibration condition of the compressor. This severe vibration condition only occurs when only happens when the control slide valve is at, or at near its minimum position. The vibration was so intense that the contractor immediately shut the compressor down. Also, the contractor’s investigation discovered the ‘PHD’ vibration monitoring system was inactive. When the monitoring system was activated, the compressor in fact shut down on ‘high vibration.’
Source: British Columbia Safety Authority
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