Event
- Event ID
- 150
- Quality
- Description
- A rupture of a tube in the furnace of an oil refinery caused it to loose 700 pounds of diesel and hydrogen resulting in a fire. The fire burned for a half hour with 30- to 40-foot (10 to 12 m) flames. No one was injured.
- Event Initiating system
- Classification of the physical effects
- Hydrogen Release and Ignition
- Nature of the consequences
- Fire (No additional details provided)
- Macro-region
- North America
- Country
- United States
- Date
- Main component involved?
- Heat Exchanger (Pipe)
- How was it involved?
- Rupture & Formation Of A Flammable H2-Hc-Air Mixture
- Initiating cause
- Unknown
- Root causes
- Unknown (No additional details provided)
- Root CAUSE analysis
- Both INITIATING and ROOT CAUSES are unknown. Assuming that the 'tube in the furnace' was part of the fired-heater pre-heating the feedstock H2+diesel, the INITIATING CAUSE could be over-heating. But this is not confirmed by any evidence provided by the sources.
Facility
- Application
- Petrochemical Industry
- Sub-application
- Generic refinery process
- Hydrogen supply chain stage
- All components affected
- pipe, furnace
- Location type
- Open
- Location description
- Industrial Area
- Operational condition
Emergency & Consequences
- Number of injured persons
- 0
- Number of fatalities
- 0
- Post-event summary
- Nobody was injured, prperty losses unknown. 320 kg of a diesel-hydrogen mixture were released.
- Emergency action
- The cylinder valve was closed, stopping the flow.
Event Nature
- Release type
- Gas mixture
- Involved substances (% vol)
- H2,
diesel - Released amount
- 700 kg
- Presumed ignition source
- Not reported
References
- Reference & weblink
Wikipedia lemma "List of natural gas and oil production accidents in the United States"<br />
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:DownloadAsPdf&page=L… />
(accessed January 2025)Desert News<br />
https://www.deseret.com/2009/1/14/20296266/refinery-cited-in-past-years… />
(accessed January 2025)
JRC assessment
- Sources categories
- Wikipedia