Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept

In the oil and gas industry, hydrocarbon process equipment was previously often thermally insulated by applying insulation directly to the metal surface. Fire protective insulation was applied outside the thermal insulation. In some cases, severe corrosion attacks were observed due to ingress of hum...

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Main Authors: Joachim Søreng Bjørge, Maria-Monika Metallinou, Arjen Kraaijeveld, Torgrim Log
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-11-01
Series:Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/5/4/72
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spelling doaj-801bb4fb0d114c6f8122106e65acf4872020-11-24T22:05:33ZengMDPI AGTechnologies2227-70802017-11-01547210.3390/technologies5040072technologies5040072Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test ConceptJoachim Søreng Bjørge0Maria-Monika Metallinou1Arjen Kraaijeveld2Torgrim Log3Q Rådgivning AS/PDS Protek, Øvregata 126, 5527 Haugesund, NorwayWestern Norway University of Applied Sciences, 5528 Haugesund, NorwayWestern Norway University of Applied Sciences, 5528 Haugesund, NorwayWestern Norway University of Applied Sciences, 5528 Haugesund, NorwayIn the oil and gas industry, hydrocarbon process equipment was previously often thermally insulated by applying insulation directly to the metal surface. Fire protective insulation was applied outside the thermal insulation. In some cases, severe corrosion attacks were observed due to ingress of humidity and condensation at cold surfaces. Introducing a 25 mm air gap to prevent wet thermal insulation and metal wall contact is expected to solve the corrosion issues. This improved insulation methodology does, however, require more space that may not be available when refurbishing older process plants. Relocating structural elements would introduce much hot work, which should be minimized in live plants. It is also costly. The aim of the present study is therefore to develop a test concept for testing fire resistance of equipment protected with only air-gap and thermal insulation, i.e., without the fire-protective insulation. The present work demonstrates a conceptual methodology for small scale fire testing of mockups resembling a section of a distillation column. The mockups were exposed to a small-scale propane flame in a test configuration where the flow rate and the flame zone were optimized to give heat flux levels in the range 250–350 kW/m2. Results are presented for a mockup resembling a 16 mm thick distillation column steel wall. It is demonstrated that the modern distance insulation in combination with the heat capacity of the column wall indicates 30+ minutes fire resistance. The results show that this methodology has great potentials for low cost fire testing of other configurations, and it may serve as a set-up for product development.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/5/4/72small scale fire testinghydrocarbon fireslow cost
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joachim Søreng Bjørge
Maria-Monika Metallinou
Arjen Kraaijeveld
Torgrim Log
spellingShingle Joachim Søreng Bjørge
Maria-Monika Metallinou
Arjen Kraaijeveld
Torgrim Log
Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
Technologies
small scale fire testing
hydrocarbon fires
low cost
author_facet Joachim Søreng Bjørge
Maria-Monika Metallinou
Arjen Kraaijeveld
Torgrim Log
author_sort Joachim Søreng Bjørge
title Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
title_short Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
title_full Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
title_fullStr Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
title_full_unstemmed Small Scale Hydrocarbon Fire Test Concept
title_sort small scale hydrocarbon fire test concept
publisher MDPI AG
series Technologies
issn 2227-7080
publishDate 2017-11-01
description In the oil and gas industry, hydrocarbon process equipment was previously often thermally insulated by applying insulation directly to the metal surface. Fire protective insulation was applied outside the thermal insulation. In some cases, severe corrosion attacks were observed due to ingress of humidity and condensation at cold surfaces. Introducing a 25 mm air gap to prevent wet thermal insulation and metal wall contact is expected to solve the corrosion issues. This improved insulation methodology does, however, require more space that may not be available when refurbishing older process plants. Relocating structural elements would introduce much hot work, which should be minimized in live plants. It is also costly. The aim of the present study is therefore to develop a test concept for testing fire resistance of equipment protected with only air-gap and thermal insulation, i.e., without the fire-protective insulation. The present work demonstrates a conceptual methodology for small scale fire testing of mockups resembling a section of a distillation column. The mockups were exposed to a small-scale propane flame in a test configuration where the flow rate and the flame zone were optimized to give heat flux levels in the range 250–350 kW/m2. Results are presented for a mockup resembling a 16 mm thick distillation column steel wall. It is demonstrated that the modern distance insulation in combination with the heat capacity of the column wall indicates 30+ minutes fire resistance. The results show that this methodology has great potentials for low cost fire testing of other configurations, and it may serve as a set-up for product development.
topic small scale fire testing
hydrocarbon fires
low cost
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/5/4/72
work_keys_str_mv AT joachimsørengbjørge smallscalehydrocarbonfiretestconcept
AT mariamonikametallinou smallscalehydrocarbonfiretestconcept
AT arjenkraaijeveld smallscalehydrocarbonfiretestconcept
AT torgrimlog smallscalehydrocarbonfiretestconcept
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