MikeBP
Petroleum
- Jul 12, 2019
- 4
Hi,
I work as a technical safety engineer in the oil and gas industry and are trying to find the reason behind the NFPA 15 requirement for effective water spray within 30 seconds after detection as this is very hard target to meet for big offshore installations with large fire pump (longer run-up time). In the latest NFPA 15 the reason behind the requirement is not mentioned other than "needed to meet design objectives". In older revisions of the standard it is mentioned that this is in order to ensure that the system operates (exposure protection) before the formation of carbon deposists on the surfaces to be protected and before the possible failure of any containers of flammable liquids or gases because of the temperautre rise. But I cannot find where the scientific reasoning behind the number "30 seconds". Does anybody know?
Best regards,
Mike
I work as a technical safety engineer in the oil and gas industry and are trying to find the reason behind the NFPA 15 requirement for effective water spray within 30 seconds after detection as this is very hard target to meet for big offshore installations with large fire pump (longer run-up time). In the latest NFPA 15 the reason behind the requirement is not mentioned other than "needed to meet design objectives". In older revisions of the standard it is mentioned that this is in order to ensure that the system operates (exposure protection) before the formation of carbon deposists on the surfaces to be protected and before the possible failure of any containers of flammable liquids or gases because of the temperautre rise. But I cannot find where the scientific reasoning behind the number "30 seconds". Does anybody know?
Best regards,
Mike