viernes, 20 de mayo de 2016

Process Puzzler: Preclude Phosgene Perils

OSHA is investigating us after an incident involving our phosgene reactor. We make a ketone in it by adding phosgene to dimethyl aniline (DMA) using ZnCl2 as catalyst and toluene as solvent. The process consists of a reactor, condenser, receiver and 4%-caustic scrubber.
Normally, we use recycled toluene. However, on the night of the incident, operators found the toluene was contaminated with byproducts, trace water and hydrochloric acid. So, they added fresh toluene to the reactor after purging the vessel with hot nitrogen.
As part of the startup procedure, they sent phosgene to the reactor to eliminate any water present. The operators didn’t see any temperature rise, which would have indicated water was present. So, they added more phosgene as well as DMA to the reactor, and then heated it to 150°F with hot water and steam. Instead of rising steadily, the temperature suddenly climbed to over 250°F before the pressure control valve went to 100%. Shortly after that, the pressure safety valve opened. Our crew sheltered in place; tests show no phosgene was released. However, OSHA is involved because an operator near the scrubber was hurt when the flange close to the condenser leaked. Our investigation indicates an operator likely was to blame for the incident. Do you agree? What do you think caused the event? Can you suggest any process improvements?

What Procedures Are In Place?

To begin with, there is not enough information in the puzzler to actually solve the problem. A plant’s safety culture is a microcosm of living interactive personal relationships that are hard to quantify. The first thing to look at is the fact this incident falls outside of normal operating conditions: toluene was found to be contaminated. So this is an abnormal operating condition, by stating such we can now look to see if there are procedures in place to handle the upset condition. Is there a standard operating procedure for adding fresh toluene to the process? If yes, does it cover reactor parameters for using phosgene as a desiccant? Does the procedure have parameters (high/low/emergency stop) for when to take emergency procedures?
Your situation looks as though the operators mixed normal operation procedures with abnormal operational conditions, producing an unplanned pressure event. As far as an operator being responsible for the incident, you have not provided enough data (length of time in job, training records, past plant history, standard operating procedures, etc.) for that decision to be made.
If I were investigating this incident, I would find out how many times this condition of contaminated toluene has happened before, and what incident procedures were used in the past. If you remove the condition of contaminated toluene from this incident, the incident cannot happen. At the very least, a team consisting of management and operations needs to further investigate this event in a process hazards analysis. Also, there was no mention of safety interlocks on the process system, or whether or not they were in working order.

Ponder Three Issues

I am surprised no phosgene was detected. What do you suppose neutralized it? Assigning blame is easy. Finding the root cause may seem easy but isn’t. Let’s take this in order of priority: 1) the pressure relief scenario; 2) instrument failures; and 3) poorly understood chemistry (which, of course, may impact pressure relief). But follow Kletz’s first rule of accidents: Don’t operate equipment immediately following an accident until it has been inspected.
Think strategically — that’s what OSHA would want you to do. Hire a consultant with expertise. More than likely that person will recommend going with a rupture disc in place of a combination relief valve and rupture disc. This is known as the “biggest damn hole” approach. You’ll want pairs of them in parallel. If one disc pair pops, you can switch to the other. Establish a surefire method for identifying which pair of discs is in operation and which is isolated.
Sometimes the first disc of the pair will crack and pressurize the pipe between the two discs. When this happens, you can switch to the other pair while repairing the first disc. For the safety of the maintenance crew, it is best to have two double-block valves with a bleed in between instead of a single car-seal isolation valve. Take care in choosing the valve seals — you want uni-directional/bi-directional seals. Of course, the double-block valves should be car-sealed open. Refer to:https://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/3862917/1234089597/name/DBB+vs+DIB.pdf.
As part of the pressure-relief-scenario review, consider the size of the condenser receiver and its vent. Also, evaluate the vent lines for liquid condensation; condensation can restrict vapor flow, especially if there are horizontal sections that could act as traps.

TOMADO DE : http://www.chemicalprocessing.com/articles/2016/process-puzzler-preclude-phosgene-perils/

No hay comentarios.:

Publicar un comentario