Root Cause Analysis (RCA): A pipe elbow sudden pipe burst fatalities and wrecked panel instrumentation.
Article Type: | Root Cause Analysis (RCA) |
Category: | Mechanical |
Equipment Type: | Pipelines and Miscellaneous Problems |
Author: | S. Raghava Chari |
Note: This root cause analysis (RCA) is from real-time scenarios that happened in industries during the tenure of two or three decades ago. These articles will help you to improve your troubleshooting skills and knowledge.
The author’s (instrument engineer then returned home from two days outstation trip. His son informed about the previous night’s frantic plant phone call: “an accident has happened; report soonest.”
Reporting within an hour by 10 AM, he learned the following sad news:
System description, accident root cause, and recurrence prevention remedial steps follow and the instrument restoration details under instrumentation problems.
Complete Article: Wrecked Control Panel Problem
The Night Superintendent (NS) responding to the emergency siren rushed to the ammonia plant. Noticed the spill from the burst.
He, using the two shift electricians, shift mechanics and 2 lab technicians wearing gas masks got the persons moved to a safe place. Called the local fire brigade and an ambulance from the general hospital.
Then he, he shut down and secured the plant using the same persons. Since, the control room instruments have become inoperable, and his helpers ignorant of various valves locations, he took them there and showed how to take CV on hand jack and mode and got the valves closed / opened as needed and secured the plant.
Using them, he performed other tasks and restored some order and the others who reached on his call took over.
Thanks to these heroic efforts, the author and his team entered the cleaned-up control room and started instruments restoration discussed details under instrumentation problems.
After restoring order, an inspecting engineer inspected and found a gaping 200×150 elliptical burst opening in the 10” V-ball valve (above figure) immediately downstream 16” elbow outer wall.
Suddenly jetting 35-bars, 120 deg C, high velocity, and enormous volume liquid spill flashing into vapors shattered the control room front glass panels, filled the control room, and caused the above-described sad events. The inspection engineer’s failure analysis report follows:
The turbulent high-velocity liquid exiting the 10”x300# rated V-ball type control valve (CV) constantly hit the elbow outer wall and caused the accident thus:
The below given are the Accident Prevention Recommendations:
The plant re-located all control valves (above figure) in the vertical (Right leg in this case) leg with necessary upstream and downstream straight lengths and followed the other recommendations too.
The crew provided the working platform and cat ladder approach for operator access for easy hand-jack operation. Subsequent inspections confirmed the recommended corrective steps adequacy.
Pipe or pipefittings never burst thereafter.
Author: S. Raghava Chari
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