Английская Википедия:Boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion

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Файл:Philadelphia Energy Solutions Refinery BLEVE.png
A BLEVE-fireball at the Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery, as rendered by the CSB

A boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion (BLEVE, Шаблон:IPAc-en Шаблон:Respell) is an explosion caused by the rupture of a vessel containing a pressurized liquid that is or has reached a temperature above its boiling point.[1][2] Because the boiling point of a liquid rises with pressure, the contents of the pressurized vessel can remain a liquid as long as the vessel is intact. If the vessel's integrity is compromised, the loss of pressure drops the boiling point, which can cause the liquid to convert to gas expanding rapidly. If the gas is flammable, as is the case with e.g., hydrocarbons and alcohols, further damage can be caused by the ensuing fire. However, BLEVEs do not necessarily involve fire.

Mechanism

There are three key elements in the formation of a BLEVE:[3]

  1. A material in liquid form at a temperature above its normal atmospheric pressure boiling point.
  2. A containment vessel maintaining the pressure that keeps the substance in liquid form.
  3. A sudden loss of containment that rapidly drops the pressure.

Typically, a BLEVE starts with a vessel containing liquid held above its atmospheric-pressure boiling temperature. Many substances normally stored as liquids, such as carbon dioxide, propane, and other industrial gases have boiling temperatures below room temperature when at atmospheric pressure. In the case of water, a BLEVE could occur if a pressure vessel is heated beyond Шаблон:Convert. That container, because the boiling water pressurizes it, must be capable of holding liquid water at very high temperatures.

Файл:Bleve explosion.svg
BLEVE mechanism

If the pressurized vessel ruptures, the pressure which prevents the liquid from boiling is lost. If the rupture is catastrophic, i.e., the vessel becomes suddenly no longer capable of holding any pressure, then the liquid will find itself at a temperature far above its boiling point. This causes a portion of the liquid to instantaneously vaporize with extremely rapid expansion. Depending on temperatures, pressures and the material involved, the expansion may be so rapid that it can be classified as an explosion, fully capable of inflicting severe damage on its surroundings.

For example, a tank of pressurized liquid water held at Шаблон:Convert might be pressurized to Шаблон:Convert above atmospheric (or gauge) pressure. If the tank containing the water were to rupture, there would for a brief moment exist a volume of liquid water which would be at:

At atmospheric pressure the boiling point of water is Шаблон:Convert. Liquid water at atmospheric pressure does not exist at temperatures higher than Шаблон:Convert. At that moment, the water would boil and turn to vapor explosively, and the Шаблон:Convert liquid water turned to gas would take up significantly more volume (≈1,600-fold) than it did as liquid, causing a vapor explosion. Such explosions can happen when the superheated water of a boiler escapes through a crack in a boiler, causing a boiler explosion.

Physical BLEVEs

The term BLEVE is often associated to explosive fires from pressure vessels a flammable liquid. However, a BLEVE can occur even with a non-flammable substance such as water,[4] liquid nitrogen, liquid helium or other refrigerants or cryogenics. Such materials can go through purely physical BLEVEs, not entailing flames or other chemical reactions. In the case of unignited BLEVEs of liquefied gases, rapid cooling due to the absorption of the enthalpy of vaporization is a hazard that can cause frostbite. Asphyxiation from the expanding vapors is also possible, if the vapor cloud is not rapidly dispersed, as can be the case inside a building, or in a trough in the case of heavier-than-air gasses. The vapors can also be toxic, in which case harm and possibly death can occur at relatively low concentrations and, therefore, even far from the source.

BLEVE–fireball

If a flammable substance, however, is subject to a BLEVE, it can ignite upon release, either due to friction, mechanical spark or other point sources, or from a pre-existing fire that had engulfed the pressure vessel and caused it to fail in the first place. In such a case, the burning vapors will further expand, adding to the force of the explosion. Furthermore, a very significant amount of the escaped fluid will burn in a matter of seconds in a raising fireball, which will generate extremely high levels of thermal radiation. While the blast effects can be devastating, a flammable substance BLEVE typically causes more damage due to the fireball thermal radiation than the blast overpressure.

Hazards of impinging fires

BLEVEs can be caused by an external fire near the storage vessel causing heating of the contents and pressure build-up. While tanks are often designed to withstand great pressure, constant heating can cause the metal to weaken and eventually fail. If the tank is being heated in an area where there is no liquid (such as near its top), it may rupture faster because the boiling liquid does not afford cooling in that area. Pressure vessels are usually equipped with relief valves that vent off excess pressure, but the tank can still fail if the pressure is not released quickly enough.[1] Relief valves are sized to release pressure fast enough to prevent the pressure from increasing beyond the strength of the vessel, but not so fast as to be the cause of an explosion. An appropriately sized relief valve will allow the liquid inside to boil slowly, maintaining a constant pressure in the vessel until all the liquid has boiled and the vessel empties. In an impinging fire scenario, it is virtually certain that the released vapors will ignite upon release, forming a fireball.

Safety measures

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Notable accidents

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Notable BLEVE accidents include:

See also

References

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Sources

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Further Reading

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External links

Шаблон:Wiktionary Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:Fire protection