Perry Babin On pages 143-146 multiple methods of venting were listed. Which one was used?
On pages 143-146 multiple methods of venting were listed. Which one was used?
Euclid
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
I recall the name Red Adair, but not from Boys Life, and I have also watched the John Wayne movie 'Hellfighters'. That being said oil field fires are a relatively KNOWN opponent as opposed to HAZMAT incidents that today's first responders must handle. HAZMAT and their incidents are all unique, depending on the specific properties of the particular chemical that is involved and the conditions that are surrounding the affected chemical containers.
If 'Hellfighters' is any indication - there was a lot of 'cowboy' thinking being deployed. I would like to think Mr. Adair was less of a cowboy in his real operations.
OvermodMy problem is that I was raised with Boy's Life-style stories about the heroic exploits of Red Adair. That sort of outfit would have figured out some way to hot-tap the cars "enough" to avoid the need for the breach... right??? ...
...
I saw the John Wayne movie loosely based on Red Adair's oil well fire fighting career, and one line I remember is him saying sometimes you have to "walk away" from an impossible job. (That usually involves drilling relief wells to try to intercept the high pressure zone.)
In my oil field career, I have been on blowouts and oil well fires, and any heroics I saw happened when the drilling crew was trying to control a blowout or evacuate any citizens in the area. When the well fire control specialists get there, everything done is purposeful and well thought out. The scene is methodically cleared of all debris, to eliminate additional ignition sources, before they get to working on the well itself. While fire generally consumes oil, gas and hydrogen sulfide, sometimes carbon dioxide also comes up the wells, but I've never seen that put out a well fire.
As far as hot tapping, I have only seen that done in gas storage fields on old (poorly) plugged and capped wells, and that was in the spring/end of heating season when field pressures were at the lowest.
EuclidIt will show up as the present, and then we will learn the result.
Hence the five step process....
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
BaltACDALL those involved in a incident, Railroad, Contractors, First Responders, State Agencies, Federal Agencies are endeavoring to make the best possible decisions based upon the information and data that they come into possession of.
This can't be emphasized enough. Nobody is looking at a situation and thinking "how can I make this the most painful for all involved."
That said, hind sight is almost always 20-20. But in the heat of the moment, you do the best you know how. Sometimes it turns out that you had wrong information, interpreted it incorrectly, or things just didn't turn out the way you thought they would. Life's like that, too.
Perry Babin Euclid Then a decision was somehow made to burn all five tank cars of vinyl chloride rather than just the one that had been suspected of developing polymerization. So the plan was executed with a massive open burn to dispose of the vinyl chloride. In a situation like this where someone outside of the railroad makes a decision that results in large scale damage/pollution (where there would have been none), is the RR likely to have to pay for the damage/pollution cleanup, lawsuits... (again, where there would have been none if the tanks would have simply been left alone)?
Euclid Then a decision was somehow made to burn all five tank cars of vinyl chloride rather than just the one that had been suspected of developing polymerization. So the plan was executed with a massive open burn to dispose of the vinyl chloride.
In a situation like this where someone outside of the railroad makes a decision that results in large scale damage/pollution (where there would have been none), is the RR likely to have to pay for the damage/pollution cleanup, lawsuits... (again, where there would have been none if the tanks would have simply been left alone)?
Perry BabinIn a situation like this where someone outside of the railroad makes a decision that results in large scale damage/pollution (where there would have been none), is the RR likely to have to pay for the damage/pollution cleanup, lawsuits... (again, where there would have been none if the tanks would have simply been left alone)?
The railroads, as carriers, are ALWAYS on the hook for ALL the costs resulting from a HAZMAT incident - even when they 'didn't do' anything with the shipment that became a HAZMAT incident on their property.
In addition to all the clean up and remediation costs they also have to make the shipper 'whole' for the loss of the contents of the cars.
ALL those involved in a incident, Railroad, Contractors, First Responders, State Agencies, Federal Agencies are endeavoring to make the best possible decisions based upon the information and data that they come into possession of.
I believe Norfolk Southern accepted full responsibility for the cleanup and all sorts of community costs beyond it, within hours after the accident. Even that was not quick enough for some, who needed to get in quick with the insults, threats, and consequences for what the railroad already had said it was going to be doing.
No matter whether 'incident command' turns out to have made the awful choice or not, Norfolk Southern will pay for the wreck cleanup, and the full cost of decontaminating the ROW and adjacent areas of spill, and in all probability the EPA's costs for taking over incident management to the chemical equivalent of 'cold shutdown'.
But let me stop you right away, very hard, when I see you write something like
Perry Babin(again, where there would have been none if the tanks would have simply been left alone)
Perry Babin is the RR likely to have to pay for the damage/pollution cleanup, lawsuits... (again, where there would have been none if the tanks would have simply been left alone)?
This will be kicking around the court system for years. Hence a lot of the finger pointing and rear end covering by the players.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Then a decision was somehow made to burn all five tank cars of vinyl chloride rather than just the one that had been suspected of developing polymerization. So the plan was executed with a massive open burn to dispose of the vinyl chloride.
"Mark Trail" is still around? Wow.
On a related tack... The newspaper comic strip "Mark Trail," which has an environmentalist slant, has for the past few weeks been focusing on a fictional train disaster very similar to the East Palestine wreck.
https://comicskingdom.com/mark-trail/2023-06-26
(Today's strip, embedded below, is a pretty pointed critique of the railroads' press conference performance.)
--Steven Otte, Model Railroader senior associate editorsotte@kalmbach.com
tree68 BaltACD You mean the crisis level meetings among the parties didn't have a Secretary to take minutes of the meeting and potentially even a video recording of it? Meetings like that are usually held under a canopy, or maybe in the meeting room of the fire station...
BaltACD You mean the crisis level meetings among the parties didn't have a Secretary to take minutes of the meeting and potentially even a video recording of it?
Meetings like that are usually held under a canopy, or maybe in the meeting room of the fire station...
That I am well aware of - 'the lawyers, however'.
Of course, with today's cell phones - personal and company issued ???????
.
BaltACDYou mean the crisis level meetings among the parties didn't have a Secretary to take minutes of the meeting and potentially even a video recording of it?
tree68I would imagine that the five steps of strategic planning got a workout: Determine your strategic position. Prioritize your objectives. Develop a strategic plan. Execute and manage your plan. Review and revise the plan. It's possible that step four never got off the table sometimes.
You mean the crisis level meetings among the parties didn't have a Secretary to take minutes of the meeting and potentially even a video recording of it?
I would imagine that the five steps of strategic planning got a workout:
MidlandMikeYou seemed to have changed your thoughts on the general advisability of hot tapping in this situation since your July 14 post.
My problem is that I was raised with Boy's Life-style stories about the heroic exploits of Red Adair. That sort of outfit would have figured out some way to hot-tap the cars "enough" to avoid the need for the breach... right???
Meanwhile, we try not to judge the people on site, working with the information they had, and SOMEHOW deciding on an awful approach which left NS looking like an expedient, public-be-damned, incompetent outfit. I am beginning to see how this was a comedy of communication errors once the consultants got scared off attempts to set up for hot-tap. For example we see Wood go into a meeting, say to incident command that the consultants say it's unsafe to hot-tap and it looks from the temperature spikes that we'll have to breach before the safety consequences get much, much worse... and then have to leave that meeting to go talk to the NTSB people. While incident command gets a sort of target fixation on the expressed 'necessity' of a breach as expressed... now not one, but all five...
Overmod ... The correct way, really the only correct way to have handled this was to contain the vinyl chloride. That is what the 'hot-tapping' would have accomplished: reducing the internal pressure by pumping out and recovering a substantial amount of the vinyl chloride (any polymerization decreasing as the pressure was relieved) until the cars could be more safely approached and the remaining material extracted or passivated.
The correct way, really the only correct way to have handled this was to contain the vinyl chloride. That is what the 'hot-tapping' would have accomplished: reducing the internal pressure by pumping out and recovering a substantial amount of the vinyl chloride (any polymerization decreasing as the pressure was relieved) until the cars could be more safely approached and the remaining material extracted or passivated.
You seemed to have changed your thoughts on the general advisability of hot tapping in this situation since your July 14 post.
EuclidI assume that a 100% destruction of the vinyl chloride would have required the use of a sophisticated technical incinerator designed and built for the purpose.
I think the operating assumption -- we're unlikely to have truly candid testimony on this, if so, for obvious reasons -- is that the vinyl chloride was being treated like a comparably low-boiling volatile hydrocarbon subject to BLEVE conditions. The internal boiling action would break up the ejected mass of material, the heat would rapidly expand it, the air would thoroughly carburete the resulting vapor and finely-divided liquid, and the propagating combustion heat would finish the job of volatilizing and surface-burning any remaining droplets in the cloud.
What actually happened, I think, is that the cloud 'quenched' early, and ejected a considerable amount of fairly large droplets that 'went out' too early, or were only surface-burning as they fell back down to ground. This is a different mechanism than what I think you're imagining, a huge 'fallout plume' drifting downwind with vinyl chloride, well, falling out of it as it cooled and condensed. (It remains to be seen what the actual fallout pattern with time after the breach is mapped to be.)
[quote user="Overmod"]
Euclid Mr. McCarty wonders if this focused tight column of upward discharge’ appearing to include liquid, contains polymerizing vinyl chloride. He seems very concerned about this, apparently because it might prove that polymerization was under way, thus confirming the persisting question about that point prior to the burn-off.
That the discharge is liquid monomer can be determined from the flow characteristics. The clouds are likely vaporized monomer becoming visible, just like water vapor from ''steam', by entrainment of the edges of the released jet in the surrounding cold air.
Note that 'polymerization' inside the car would likely start at a number of sites -- that is sometimes called 'polynucleate initiation' because it starts at nuclei that have free-radical activity or otherwise induce enough polymerization to accelerate a local exotherm. That implies that there may be a certain amount of polymerized (probably fairly short-chain) "PVC" in that jet, perhaps enough that it acts as a slush rather than a true liquid, and to me it would follow that such material might get into the PRD mechanism or ports and make it leak when 'closed' -- or, as with the car that was seeping until it suddenly and alarmingly stopped, that enough solid poiymer was aggregating at the valve and port connections to clog them up.
What I wonder is this: Why there is no visible flame in this photo of the gaseous/liquid material rising after the burn-off has begun?
As with any BLEVE not directly accelerated by prompt critical-mixture ignition, the expanding vapor will not be ignited until (1) it has been carbureted, if it does not contain some internal oxygen or other reactive substance, and (2) an adequate initiation source, a sustained spark, hot-surface contact, or flame, actually initiates the combustion reactions. One would not expect stabilized vinyl chloride to 'explode' on release, and of course any polymerization actively taking place under confined pressure and insulated temperature conditions would more or less promptly cease as the jet bled down the pressure and allowed more and more of the mass to contact very cold air, cooling further through expansion. Since this was to be a 'controlled burn' -- whoever arranged the thing would have set up a defined method of ignition. This ought to be, if it isn't already, something for the hearing to focus on intensely. It may be that the presumption was to use some sort of spot pyrotechnics or flameholding device at the periphery, and 'rely' on entrainment carburetion and heat transfer in the blackening (and therefore thermally much more conductive, as at Flixborough) to accomplish the desired ignition of 'all or substantially all' the monomer. I am neither a chemist nor a hazardous-materials specialist -- but it seems very clear to me from what I do know that reasonable atomization, then reasonable carburetion, and then assured full ignition in a cloud generated by ad hoc shaped-charge breaching -- and remember that the objection to hot-tapping the cars, something with minimal or no explosive involvement, was that even well before a 'critical' explosion situation, the cars weren't safe to approach for the necessary precise placement -- would be Not Very Damn Likely. And that one of the most obvious things that would occur would be surface-burning condensed globules of expelled vinyl chloride (with or without a 'salting' of polymerized and less-reactive but still combustible material) that would condense into the virtual equivalent of rain and find a happy home both on the cold, cold ground and in any handy bodies of water. This raises the question of whether vinyl chloride would have been lifted by the rising thermal plume without ever being ignited. With a little (relatively rudimentary) analysis, you could figure out how the temperature would reduce on expansion into cold ambient, and how the driving pressure tending to lift the vinyl chloride against its own mass would decrease in time and space. While those are BLEVE kinetics, they aren't yet complicated by ignition through the cloud and subsequent release and re-absorption of radiant heat. To answer the direct question: it would have paddled condensing monomer over a substantial area, following the projection of streamlines I see pretty clearly in the first second or so of the drone video of the controlled release. Now, the actual fallout plume might have been different in shape, or something else might have ignited the cloud or part of it randomly, and there'd probably be a hell of a lot more ground contamination requiring digging up and eventual pyrolysis. I can't imagine anyone, anywhere, who was part of a trained and responsible incident command to order something like that to be done. Perhaps someone like Tree might comment on what sort of triage assessment would have justified it. In other words, with this improvised flooded combustion system used here, [is it] certain that there will be complete combustion of the vinyl chloride “fuel”? No. Hell no. In fact even a polite answer expressing how unlikely that would be would not fly on a family-friendly forum without a great deal of circumspection and self-control I no longer have concerning this aspect of the East Palestine accident.
Since this was to be a 'controlled burn' -- whoever arranged the thing would have set up a defined method of ignition. This ought to be, if it isn't already, something for the hearing to focus on intensely. It may be that the presumption was to use some sort of spot pyrotechnics or flameholding device at the periphery, and 'rely' on entrainment carburetion and heat transfer in the blackening (and therefore thermally much more conductive, as at Flixborough) to accomplish the desired ignition of 'all or substantially all' the monomer.
I am neither a chemist nor a hazardous-materials specialist -- but it seems very clear to me from what I do know that reasonable atomization, then reasonable carburetion, and then assured full ignition in a cloud generated by ad hoc shaped-charge breaching -- and remember that the objection to hot-tapping the cars, something with minimal or no explosive involvement, was that even well before a 'critical' explosion situation, the cars weren't safe to approach for the necessary precise placement -- would be Not Very Damn Likely. And that one of the most obvious things that would occur would be surface-burning condensed globules of expelled vinyl chloride (with or without a 'salting' of polymerized and less-reactive but still combustible material) that would condense into the virtual equivalent of rain and find a happy home both on the cold, cold ground and in any handy bodies of water.
This raises the question of whether vinyl chloride would have been lifted by the rising thermal plume without ever being ignited.
With a little (relatively rudimentary) analysis, you could figure out how the temperature would reduce on expansion into cold ambient, and how the driving pressure tending to lift the vinyl chloride against its own mass would decrease in time and space. While those are BLEVE kinetics, they aren't yet complicated by ignition through the cloud and subsequent release and re-absorption of radiant heat. To answer the direct question: it would have paddled condensing monomer over a substantial area, following the projection of streamlines I see pretty clearly in the first second or so of the drone video of the controlled release. Now, the actual fallout plume might have been different in shape, or something else might have ignited the cloud or part of it randomly, and there'd probably be a hell of a lot more ground contamination requiring digging up and eventual pyrolysis. I can't imagine anyone, anywhere, who was part of a trained and responsible incident command to order something like that to be done. Perhaps someone like Tree might comment on what sort of triage assessment would have justified it.
In other words, with this improvised flooded combustion system used here, [is it] certain that there will be complete combustion of the vinyl chloride “fuel”?
No. Hell no. In fact even a polite answer expressing how unlikely that would be would not fly on a family-friendly forum without a great deal of circumspection and self-control I no longer have concerning this aspect of the East Palestine accident.
EuclidMr. McCarty wonders if this focused tight column of upward discharge’ appearing to include liquid, contains polymerizing vinyl chloride. He seems very concerned about this, apparently because it might prove that polymerization was under way, thus confirming the persisting question about that point prior to the burn-off.
What I wonder is this: Why there is no visible flame in this photo of the gaseous/liquid material rising after the burn-off has begun?[quote]As with any BLEVE not directly accelerated by prompt critical-mixture ignition, the expanding vapor will not be ignited until (1) it has been carbureted, if it does not contain some internal oxygen or other reactive substance, and (2) an adequate initiation source, a sustained spark, hot-surface contact, or flame, actually initiates the combustion reactions. One would not expect stabilized vinyl chloride to 'explode' on release, and of course any polymerization actively taking place under confined pressure and insulated temperature conditions would more or less promptly cease as the jet bled down the pressure and allowed more and more of the mass to contact very cold air, cooling further through expansion.
Overmod Euclid Look at the video starting at 7:15:55 where Mr. McCarty speaks. He describes an unburned, white plume jetting upward from a tank car during the burn-off, which he speculates to be polymerization. I cannot get this to pull up due to AT&T bandwidth issues, but either you or Mr. McCarty have a major comprehension problem. The 'unburned white plume' you saw rising in the drone video, which is presumably what Mr. McCarty is describing, is not 'polymerization', which would have slowed or stopped promptly upon the internal pressure being relieved by the breach. Polymerization produces a solid, which does not 'jet' in a 'cloud'. In any case the part of polymerization causing the alarm here is that it is exothermic -- it is the cause of the otherwise-unexplained heat excursions in the car(s). The result of the breach is a typical boiling-liquid (the monomer being a liquid under pressure even at the heat extremes observed) expanding-vapor (the monomer expanded very rapidly from a great number of nucleation sites in the liquid simultaneously, like overcritical water in a rocket-type boiler explosion or opening a shaken soda can) explosion -- the expansion being further accelerated by the intentional rapid ignition of the expanding plume. It was pretty clear from the drone video that the plume starts out white for what seems more than a second, and only as it begins to rise does it take fire. That not all the monomer in the plume ignited is clearly recognized from the reports of decontaminating the streams. It seemed evident to me that the blobs of monomer seen on the cold beds under cold water had fallen out of the plume at about that size, and sunk to the bottom on account of their greater density as they quickly reached thermal equilibrium. In my opinion, had the car been breached after the general manner of the PRD release seen in D-53, so the evolving plume was better shaped and amenable to flameholding ignition, there might have been better experienced 'carburetion' of the monomer in air, and combustion and pyrolysis might have occurred more completely. I think you'd still have the dioxin release question to address, though, among with all the other issues of a kludge response.
Euclid Look at the video starting at 7:15:55 where Mr. McCarty speaks. He describes an unburned, white plume jetting upward from a tank car during the burn-off, which he speculates to be polymerization.
I cannot get this to pull up due to AT&T bandwidth issues, but either you or Mr. McCarty have a major comprehension problem.
The 'unburned white plume' you saw rising in the drone video, which is presumably what Mr. McCarty is describing, is not 'polymerization', which would have slowed or stopped promptly upon the internal pressure being relieved by the breach. Polymerization produces a solid, which does not 'jet' in a 'cloud'. In any case the part of polymerization causing the alarm here is that it is exothermic -- it is the cause of the otherwise-unexplained heat excursions in the car(s).
The result of the breach is a typical boiling-liquid (the monomer being a liquid under pressure even at the heat extremes observed) expanding-vapor (the monomer expanded very rapidly from a great number of nucleation sites in the liquid simultaneously, like overcritical water in a rocket-type boiler explosion or opening a shaken soda can) explosion -- the expansion being further accelerated by the intentional rapid ignition of the expanding plume. It was pretty clear from the drone video that the plume starts out white for what seems more than a second, and only as it begins to rise does it take fire.
That not all the monomer in the plume ignited is clearly recognized from the reports of decontaminating the streams. It seemed evident to me that the blobs of monomer seen on the cold beds under cold water had fallen out of the plume at about that size, and sunk to the bottom on account of their greater density as they quickly reached thermal equilibrium.
In my opinion, had the car been breached after the general manner of the PRD release seen in D-53, so the evolving plume was better shaped and amenable to flameholding ignition, there might have been better experienced 'carburetion' of the monomer in air, and combustion and pyrolysis might have occurred more completely. I think you'd still have the dioxin release question to address, though, among with all the other issues of a kludge response.
EuclidLook at the video starting at 7:15:55 where Mr. McCarty speaks. He describes an unburned, white plume jetting upward from a tank car during the burn-off, which he speculates to be polymerization.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.