morninglori
Mechanical
- May 1, 2008
- 8
Good Afternoon,
I am looking for any references that I can use to support that the pressure developed in a steam explosion (water on a molten metal pool) does not create the overpressure which develops when a true explosive is detonated.
A am trying to develop pressure mitigation hardware for a VAR furnace. and the engineer before me has (very conservatively, IMO) used SFPE Ideal Overpressure versus scaled distance curves, converting the energy of the steam expansion to TNTequivalent mass to determine the effects on the room structure, and then to define dificult parameters for which to design safing hardware.
Basically are there a references that state that steam explosions are not detonations, so that I can remove the conservatism from the analysis and redesign the safing hardware
Thanks!
I am looking for any references that I can use to support that the pressure developed in a steam explosion (water on a molten metal pool) does not create the overpressure which develops when a true explosive is detonated.
A am trying to develop pressure mitigation hardware for a VAR furnace. and the engineer before me has (very conservatively, IMO) used SFPE Ideal Overpressure versus scaled distance curves, converting the energy of the steam expansion to TNTequivalent mass to determine the effects on the room structure, and then to define dificult parameters for which to design safing hardware.
Basically are there a references that state that steam explosions are not detonations, so that I can remove the conservatism from the analysis and redesign the safing hardware
Thanks!