Conductofoperations
Conductofoperations
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    www.aiche.org/ccps                                                                                                            www.iomosaic.com
                                          Messages for Manufacturing Personnel
                                           Conduct of Operations                                                                                 June 2015
        In January 1997 there was an explosion and fire in a                             In April 1998 an explosion followed the release of
    hydrocracking unit in a refinery in California. A pipe in                         flammable chemicals from a 2000 US gallon batch reactor
    the unit ruptured releasing a flammable mixture of                                into a building in a specialty chemical plant in New Jersey.
    hydrocarbons and hydrogen, which ignited resulting in a                           Operators were unable to control the temperature of the
    fire and explosion. There was one fatality and 46 people                          batch, and the runaway reaction partially vented through the
    were injured. One of the causes was excess temperature in                         reactor manway into the production building. 9 people were
    one of the hydrocracking reactors. The specified maximum                          injured, 2 seriously, and chemicals were released into the
    temperature in the reactors was 800ºF (425ºC), and the                            surrounding community. It is believed that the initial
    system was supposed to be shut down if the temperature                            temperature of the batch was higher than normal, making it
    exceeded this value. The reactor and the pipe which                               more difficult for operators to control the batch temperature
    ruptured were believed to have reached a temperature                              with the available cooling.
    greater than 1400ºF (760ºC).
                                                                                         In 8 of the previous 32 batches produced, operators had
        Previous temperature excursions in excess of the                              difficulty in controlling the batch temperature. The
    specified 800ºF (425ºC) maximum had occurred, but the                             temperature and the rate of temperature rise for individual
    system had not been shut down. This led operators to                              steps of the process were beyond the limits specified by the
    believe that these excursions were acceptable. Also, some                         procedure. In some cases, the temperature exceeded the
    of these temperature excursions were not investigated, and                        maximum range of the reactor temperature recorder (150ºC
    recommendations from those that were investigated were                            or 300ºF). In those batches, operators were able to regain
    not all implemented.                                                              control of the batch temperature without a runaway
                                                                                      reaction. These temperature excursions were not
                                                                                      investigated, and no action was taken in response to them.
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  Questions:
1. (5 min) What two errors led to the 1997 hydrocracking unit explosion? Describe how
   the errors could have been corrected to prevent or mitigate the incident.
2. (5-10 min) For the 1998 batch reactor explosion, what went wrong and how could it
   have been prevented? Consider whether operators had a false sense of safety with regard
   to large temperature variations.