Jet Fires
Jet Fires
Jet Fires
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Jet Fires
Background
Strategy objectives
Current knowledge of jet fire hazards
Jet fire modelling
Areas of uncertainty
Industry practice in assessment of jet fire hazards
Strategy development issues
Background
A jet or spray fire is a turbulent diffusion flame resulting from the combustion of a fuel
continuously released with some significant momentum in a particular direction or
directions. Jet fires can arise from releases of gaseous, flashing liquid (two phase) and pure
liquid inventories.
Jet fires represent a significant element of the risk associated with major accidents on
offshore installations. The high heat fluxes to impinged or engulfed objects can lead to
structural failure or vessel/pipework failure and possible further escalation. The rapid
development of a jet fire has important consequences for control and isolation strategies.
The properties of jet fires depend on the fuel composition, release conditions, release rate,
release geometry, direction and ambient wind conditions. Low velocity two-phase releases
of condensate material can produce lazy, wind affected buoyant, sooty and highly radiative
flames similar to pool fires. Sonic releases of natural gas can produce relatively high
velocity fires that are much less buoyant, less sooty and hence less radiative.
Strategy objectives
To identify areas of uncertainty in the characterisation of jet fires;
Identify where the jet fire hazard is significant in relation to other hydrocarbon
hazards;
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[2]
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[1]
The main source of detailed information on the characteristics of jet fires covered in the
reports on the programme of jet-fire research co-funded by the European Community. This
programme studied single fuel natural gas and propane jet fires (Bennett et al, 1990).
Notable recent gains in knowledge have been in the area of unconfined crude oil jet fires
and confined jet fires (compartment fires). These areas have been studied in Phase 2 of the
JIP on 'Blast and Fire Engineering of Topside Structures' (Selby and Burgan, 1998) and
another JIP on releases of 'live' crude oil containing dissolved gas and water.
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tests, by a factor two in many cases. Typical values were in the range 50 kW m-2
to 400 kW m-2.
Gosse, 1999 carried out a separate JIP to quantify the hazards posed by realistic releases
of 'live' crude oil containing dissolved gas and water.
Small amounts of water had little effect on the characteristics of the fire, larger amounts
produced a dramatic reduction in the smoke produced and increasing the water further took
the flame to the point of extinguishment.
For high water-cut releases, smoke will be less of a hazard, but very high water-cut
releases will not produce stable jet fires.
Confined fires
Work by Chamberlain (Chamberlain 1994 & 1995, OTO 94 011-024) and the Phase 2 JIP
(Selby and Burgan, 1998), studied the effect of varying a range of parameters on the fire
behaviour. Including size and location of openings (vents), fuel type, release height and
pressure for jet fires. Gas temperatures within the compartment, wall temperatures, ceiling
temperatures, target temperatures, heat fluxes to the walls, ceiling and target, gas
composition of the smoke layer and fuel release rates.
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carried out for HSE/OSD (OTO 1999 011 [5]) by Shell, showed good agreement with
medium and large-scale jet-fire experiments.
At present, commercially available semi-empirical models can provide accurate prediction
of flame shape, flame size and external radiation flux to external objects but not heat fluxes
to impinged objects. The latter must be treated empirically.
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The general level of understanding of compartment fire behaviour is now sufficiently good
to assess most compartment fire hazards with some confidence for modules having simple
geometries. In particular jet-fire temperatures, smoke layer temperatures, heat fluxes to
surfaces within the module, the extent of external flaming and internal impingement zones
can be reasonably well predicted. Estimates for CO concentrations in the smoke layer are
also available based on empirical relationships to temperature and flame stoichiometry.
Areas of uncertainty
Confined and Unconfined jet fires
Future improvement in model development of confined jet fires should focus on evaluating
the combustion product emissions from module vents.
As fields reach maturity, increasing amounts of water are entrained and formation of an
unstable jet fire my result. In unconfined jet fires the flame may be extinguished before the
fuel supply has been cut off resulting in an explosion.
There is little information relating to high water cut (e.g. 3:1 or 4:1) releases.
Actual heat transfer from the fire to the vessel is not fully definable, and hence failure
conditions and emergency depressurising requirements become uncertain.
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To raise awareness of the effect of jet fires on pressurised systems and the
inadequacy of API 521 for fire attack scenarios and the potential for under-sizing
of pressure relief systems;
To raise the awareness of the particular hazards posed by ventilation-controlled jet
fires;
To consider mitigation and control issues relating to the jet fires in the open and
confined areas;
To define the circumstances in which ventilation-controlled jet fires could occur on
offshore installations;
To develop simple tools to assess the hazards posed by ventilation-controlled jet
fires;
To collect data and understanding on the heat flux from high temperature jet
flames (ca. 1350 C) and the effects of exposure on pressurised storage vessels;
To develop an understanding of the current capability to model confined (fuelcontrolled) jet fires;
To evaluate such models against suitable large scale test data;
To develop simple tools to assess the hazards posed by confined jet fires.
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