Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 1
Introduction to Safety and Risk Assessment
Chapter -1 Introduction
Importance of Safety
Ex:
Hydrodynamic models representing two-phase flow through a vessel relief
Dispersion models representing the spread of toxic vapor through a plant
after a release
mathematical techniques to determine the various ways that processes can
fail and the probability of failure.
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The word "safety" used to mean the older strategy of accident prevention
through the use of hard hats, safety shoes, and a variety of rules and
regulations.
Definitions
Hazard:
A chemical or physical condition that has the potential to cause damage to
people, property, or the environment.
Risk:
A measure of human injury, environmental damage, or economic loss in
terms of both the incident likelihood and the magnitude of the loss or injury.
Chemical plants contain a large variety of hazards.
First, there are the usual mechanical hazards that cause worker injuries
from tripping, falling, or moving equipment.
Second, there are chemical hazards. These include fire and explosion
hazards, reactivity hazards, and toxic hazards.
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Safety Programs
System
Attitude
Fundamentals
Experience
Time
You
A safety program must have the commitment from all levels within the
organization. Safety must be given importance equal to production.
Safety Programs
Engineering Ethics
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Metrics
FAR =
No. of fatalities x 1o
during period covered
Fatality rate = No. of fatalities per year /Total number of people in applicable
population.
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Definitions
First aid:
Any one-time treatment and any follow-up visits for the purpose of
observation of minor scratches, cuts, burns, splinters, and so forth that do
not ordinarily require medical care.
Incident rate
Number of occupational injuries and/or illnesses or lost workdays per 100
full-time employees.
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Definitions
Lost workdays
Number of days (consecutive or not) after but not including the day of injury
or illness during which the employee would have worked but could not do
so, that is, during which the employee could not perform all or any part of
his or her normal assignment during all or any part of the workday or shift
because of the occupational injury or illness.
Occupational injury
Any injury such as a cut, sprain, or burn that results from a work accident or
from a single instantaneous exposure in the work environment.
Occupational illness any abnormal condition or disorder, other than one
resulting from an occupational injury, caused by exposure to environmental
factors associated with employment. It includes acute and chronic illnesses
or diseases that may be caused by inhalation, absorption, ingestion, or
direct contact.
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Risk Management
Safety is good business and, like most business situations, has an
optimal level of activity beyond which there are diminishing returns.
If safety expenditures increase, then the return increases more, but
it may not be as much as before and not as much as achieved by
spending money elsewhere.
If safety expenditures increase further, the price of the product
increases and sales diminish. This results in increased return
because of reduced loss expenditures.
Acceptable Risk
Engineers must make every effort to minimize risks within the economic
constraints of the process. No engineer should ever design a process that
he or she knows will result in certain human loss or injury, despite any
statistics.
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Public Perceptions
The general public has great difficulty with the concept of
acceptable risk. The major objection is due to the
involuntary nature of acceptable risk.
Chemical plant designers who specify the acceptable
risk are assuming that these risks are satisfactory to the
civilians living near the plant. Frequently these civilians
are not aware that there is any risk at all.
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Class Exercise
List six different products produced by chemical
engineers that are of significant benefit to mankind.
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Vapor cloud explosions account for the largest percentage of these large
losses.
Fires are the most common, followed by explosion and toxic release. With
respect to fatalities, the order reverses, with toxic release having the
greatest potential for fatalities.
The "other" category includes losses resulting from floods and windstorms
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Safety engineering involves eliminating the initiating step and replacing the
propagation steps with termination events.
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Desired
effect
Procedure
Initiation
Diminish
Propagation
Diminish
Termination
Increase
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Failure of a threaded 1%" drain connection on a rich oil line at the base of an
absorber tower in a large (1.35 MCFID) gas producing plant allowed the release of
rich oil and gas at 850 psi and -40F.
The resulting vapor cloud probably ignited from the ignition system of engine driven
re-compressors.
The 75' high X 10' diameter absorber tower eventually collapsed across the pipe rack
and on two exchanger trains. Breaking pipelines added more fuel to the fire. Severe
flame impingement on an 11,000-horsepower gas turbine-driven compressor, waste
heat recovery and super-heater train resulted in its near total destruction.
Identify the initiation, propagation, and termination steps for this accident.
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Inherent Safety
Inherently safer plants are tolerant of errors and are often the most cost
effective.
A process that does not require complex safety interlocks and elaborate
procedures is simpler, easier to operate, and more reliable.
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Inherent Safety
The following domains of inherent safety:
minimize (intensification)
substitute (substitution)
moderate (attenuation and limitation of effects)
simplify (simplification and error tolerance)
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Minimize(intensification)
Change from large batch reactor to a smaller continuous reactor.
Reduce storage inventory of raw materials.
Improve control to reduce inventory of hazardous intermediate chemicals
Reduce process hold-up.
Substitute (substitution)
Use mechanical pump seals vs. packing
Use welded pipe vs. flanged
Use solvents that are less toxic
Use mechanical gauges vs. mercury
Use chemicals with higher flash points, boiling points, and other less hazardous
properties
Use water as a heat transfer fluid instead of hot oil
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Problems
1. An employee works in a plant with a FAR of 4. If this employee works a 4-hr
shift, 200 days per year, what is the expected deaths per person per year?
Ans: 3.2x10-5 deaths / person year
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Problems
2. Three process units are in a plant. The units have FARs of 0.5,0.3, and 1.0,
respectively.
a. What is the overall FAR for the plant, assuming worker exposure to all three
units simultaneously?
b. Assume now that the units are far enough apart that an accident in one
would not affect the workers in another. If a worker spends 20% of his time in
process area 1,40% in process area 2, and 40% in process area 3, what is his
overall FAR?
0.62
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Problems
3. A plant employs 1500 full-time workers in a process with a FAR of 5. How
many industrial related deaths are expected each year?
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