haze10
Electrical
- Jan 13, 2006
- 81
So NFPA says that the mere presence of a flammable does not necessitate a hazardous area classification. So no one would question the lab chemist pouring acetone from a one liter beaker into a test tube on a lab bench, insisting that necessitates a hazardous area classification. At least I wouldn't. But what if he is filling a 10 liter reactor and pouring out of a five gallon can? What if he wheels in a 50 gal drums and hand pumps out of it into the reactor?
There is a point where the quantity of the flammable is going to necessitate a hazardous area. But NFPA 497 doesn't really define that quantity. In NFPA 45 they look at fire hazards, NFPA 45’s objectives are to:
limit injury to the occupants at the point of fire origin
limit injury to emergency response personnel
limit property loss to a maximum of one laboratory unit..
This is specific to sprinkler protection for lab space and building.
I would think we could guess at some basic concepts.
The broken test tube of acetone could form and ignitable concentration, but it would be a very limit flash with relatively low pressure.
The broken liter of acetone could form a a larger deflagration, may raise loose ceiling tiles but maybe not blow out the windows.
The gallon jug of acetone makes even a bigger deflagration and possibly blows out the windoes.
At the five gallon mark a spill could form a large deflagration and possibly move stud walls.
But where are the standards to advise us. You can't just go by air exchanges cause at the time of the spill some volume in ignitable. Plus NFPA doesn't really permit dilution as a solution. Purged enclosures are different as their function is to keep the flammables OUT of the enclosure.
What are your thoughts about where you drawn the line in the sane and tell the chemist, this much, and no more.
There is a point where the quantity of the flammable is going to necessitate a hazardous area. But NFPA 497 doesn't really define that quantity. In NFPA 45 they look at fire hazards, NFPA 45’s objectives are to:
limit injury to the occupants at the point of fire origin
limit injury to emergency response personnel
limit property loss to a maximum of one laboratory unit..
This is specific to sprinkler protection for lab space and building.
I would think we could guess at some basic concepts.
The broken test tube of acetone could form and ignitable concentration, but it would be a very limit flash with relatively low pressure.
The broken liter of acetone could form a a larger deflagration, may raise loose ceiling tiles but maybe not blow out the windows.
The gallon jug of acetone makes even a bigger deflagration and possibly blows out the windoes.
At the five gallon mark a spill could form a large deflagration and possibly move stud walls.
But where are the standards to advise us. You can't just go by air exchanges cause at the time of the spill some volume in ignitable. Plus NFPA doesn't really permit dilution as a solution. Purged enclosures are different as their function is to keep the flammables OUT of the enclosure.
What are your thoughts about where you drawn the line in the sane and tell the chemist, this much, and no more.