1. Introduction
Ethylene is a representative chemical raw material used in polyethylene, ethylene glycol, PVC, etc. and can be considered the most basic material in the petrochemical industry manufactured at an NCC (Naphtha Cracking Center) or ECC (Ethane Cracking Center) [
1]. When constructing a chemical plant for ethylene-related processes, the location of the plant facility must be determined by conducting a safety-distance review via a plot plan. In particular, the location of the storage tank, which handles a large amount of ethylene should be the most important when conducting a safety-distance review [
2].
The locations of facilities included in the plot plan of a chemical plant are set at an early stage of designing and must be carefully reviewed because they can significantly affect the economy (the quantity of pipes and land use) [
3]. The review stage is the most important stage in terms of safety distance. Because chemical plants store and handle large amounts of flammable materials, there is a risk of explosion. Therefore, the separation distance must be set by considering the characteristics of each facility to minimize the damage in the event of an explosion [
4]. The safety distance is considered, in collaboration with process safety engineers, piping engineers, and engineers from other disciplines [
5]. The widely used engineering guidelines related to safety distances are ‘PIP PNE00003: Process Unit and Offsites Layout Guide’ and ‘GAP.2.5.2: Oil and Chemical Plant Layout and Spacing’ [
6]. PIP PNE 00003 is a standard for separation distances issued by an association called Process Industry Practice (PIP). PIP is composed of about 98 major engineering companies and provides engineering guideline by their consultations. GAP.2.5.2 is a standard for separation distances issued by an association called Global Asset Protection Services (GAPS). GAPS provides engineering guidelines from the insurance company’s point of view to prevent property loss for the owners of a chemical plants. They suggest safety distances of 46 and 106.75 m, respectively, between the ethylene storage tank and process equipment. However, there is a limitation in that both guidelines suggest a consistent separation distance without considering the capacity of ethylene storage and atmospheric conditions.
Therefore, this study aims to suggest the assessment of safety distance between ethylene storage tanks and process equipment considering the storage capacity and atmospheric conditions. In the previous study, when applying the concept of separation distance, it was suggested that the effect of thermal radiation should be considered [
7]. It was noted that the effect of the thermal radiation could be analyzed by the Quantitative Risk Analysis (QRA) technique. This study also considered the effect of thermal radiation on the separation distance. As a simulation tool for the QRA technique, Phast (DNV GL) was used. Phast is widely used as a QRA simulation tool [
8]. This is because Phast is designed to comply with legal requirements from around the world, such as the Dutch’s yellow book, the U.S. EPA (Environment Protection Agency) regulation, and the UK’s HSE (Health and Safety Executive) regulation [
9,
10,
11].
2. Background
Ethylene is a petrochemical product that is at the center of supply and demand in the global petrochemical market. Ethylene is used in the gas phase at ambient temperature but liquefied under the conditions of low temperature and high pressure during storage and transportation [
12]. This study aims to analyze the safety distance between ethylene storage tanks and process equipment. Ethylene storage tanks form a liquid pool during leakage, and in the event of a fire, the vicinity is affected by thermal radiation [
13]. Globally, the effect of 37.5 kW/m
2 of thermal radiation on process-plant facilities is considered fatal, as summarized in
Table 1 [
14].
Many studies have been carried out that have selected 37.5 kW/m
2 as the criterion for the influence of thermal radiation on process equipment. There was a study that found 37.5 kW/m
2 is suitable as a thermal radiation criterion causing damage to facilities in an experiment that applied thermal radiation to a sample of an offshore platform, and propane was applied for the source material of thermal radiation [
15]. Another study selected 37.5 kW/m
2 as the criterion for causing chain explosion under the influence of thermal radiation of process equipment and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) was applied for the source material of thermal radiation [
16]. There was also a study that the separation distance between the propylene process equipment and the other facilities of chemical plant should be 37.5 kW/m
2 of thermal radiation, and propylene was applied for the source material of thermal radiation [
17]. Another study applied 37.5 kW/m
2, the criterion of thermal radiation, which has a fatal effect on structures when an explosion occurs due to a leak in an Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) tank, and LNG was applied for the source material of thermal radiation [
18]. Therefore, this study analyzed thermal radiation up to 37.5 kW/m
2, considering the ethylene storage capacity and atmospheric conditions. QRA is widely used for such thermal radiations [
19]. This study used Phast as a QRA simulation tool. The catastrophic rupture scenario provided by Phast was considered as the leakage scenario of the ethylene storage tank [
20]. In addition, EPA’s worst-case leak scenario was applied for other conditions required for the leakage scenario [
21] to conservatively approach the effects of thermal radiation due to the ethylene storage tank.
3. Methodology and Results
The radius of thermal radiation (up to 37.5 kW/m
2) was considered. The methodology flow chart applied in this study is shown in
Figure 1. In this study, thermal radiation was analyzed by Phast’s Gaussian model. The Gaussian model is a representative method that is considered for the release of materials that are lighter than air. Since the source material of this study, ethylene, is lighter than air, the Gaussian model was applied. Atmospheric stability was estimated by the temperature difference according to the height and classified into seven categories from A to G. This study was applied based on atmospheric stability D and F according to EPA’s worst-case scenario.
Ethylene was applied as the target material, and the process conditions of the tank (source item) for storing ethylene in the liquid phase are presented in
Table 2. Nine storage tank capacities were set from 10 to 50 m
3 with an interval of 5 m
3.
The height of the source of leakage in the ethylene storage tank was based on the condition of leakage from the ground and 50% relative humidity in the air according to EPA’s worst-case scenario [
21]. The following atmospheric temperatures were applied—ambient temperature (25 °C), summer (40 °C), and winter (0 °C). The applied wind speed and atmospheric stability are presented in
Table 3.
The simulation results at ambient temperature (25 °C) are presented in
Table 4 and
Figure 2, and the results of regression analysis with polynomial fitting are presented in
Table 5.
Regression equations for each case are expressed as Equations (1)–(3). The calculation of each equation provided results with high interpretation reliabilities.
The difference in atmospheric F also did not affect the radius of thermal radiation (up to 37.5 kW/m
2). This was true not only at ambient temperature (25 °C) but also under summer (40 °C) and winter (0 °C) conditions when the atmospheric stability was fixed at D, and simulation was performed using the atmospheric conditions in
Table 6.
The simulation results for summer (40 °C) and winter (0 °C) are shown in
Table 7,
Figure 3, and the regression analysis with polynomial fitting is shown in
Table 8.
For each case, the regression equation is expressed as Equations (4)–(9). Each calculation provided high interpretation results.
In the summer (40 °C) condition, a wind speed of 1.5 m/s showed a thermal radiation of 37.5 kW/m
2, which is very different from other temperature conditions. Wind speeds of 5 and 3 m/s did not show large differences, but the thermal radiation was the largest at 3 m/s. However, in winter (0 °C) and ambient temperature (25 °C) conditions, the thermal radiation was confirmed to widen to 37.5 kW/m
2 with increasing wind speed.
Figure 4 presents the thermal radiation up to 37.5 kW/m
2 for each wind speed case at ambient temperature (25 °C), summer (40 °C), and winter (0 °C) conditions.
PIP PNE00003, one of the most widely used engineering guidelines that does not consider weather conditions and ethylene storage capacity, suggests a safety distance of 46 m between the ethylene storage tank and process facility, which is underestimated irrespective of the storage and weather conditions. A safety distance of 106.75 m suggested by GAP.2.5.2 is valid only under certain capacity and weather conditions.
Table 9 presents the analysis results for each weather condition through the polynomial fitting derived from this study.
4. Discussion
The separation distance in chemical plants is considered as inherent safety to prevent chain explosion [
22]. In chemical plants, the storage tank handles a large amount of chemicals, so it should be considered first when designing the separation distance [
23]. Since the separation distance is applied as a concept to prevent chain explosion, it is independent of toxic dispersion.
The design of chemical plant is divided into code-based design and performance-based design according to the approach. Following the consistent regulation along the global engineering guideline is called code-based design, and applying the actual performance considering various factors is called performance-based design [
24]. Currently, the separation distance is dependent on the global engineering guidelines like other design fields of chemical plants. However, it is difficult to consider the global engineering guidelines as guaranteeing safety because no detailed factors are considered [
25]. QRA is performed to complement the limitations of the global engineering guidelines [
26,
27]. PIP PNE00003 and GAP.2.5.2 are the global engineering guidelines in the separation distance field [
6]. The storage tank capacity and atmospheric conditions are not considered in the separation distance between the storage tank and the process equipment presented in these guidelines. These guidelines just categorize only by item type, such as storage tank or pump and so on, and provide only consistent separation distance between categories. Therefore, this study used QRA to analyze the separation distance between storage tank and process equipment.
The influence range was analyzed for thermal radiation up to 37.5 kW/m2 in the case of a fire due to contact with an ignition source. At ambient temperature, atmospheric stability did not affect the radius of thermal radiation, and the same results were obtained for summer and winter conditions. The atmospheric stability was simulated by changing only the wind speed with fixed D.
Polynomial fitting of the radius of thermal radiation for each weather case, according to the capacities of ethylene storage under ambient temperature, summer, and winter conditions, provided results with an average reliability of 99.892%. In the summer, changes in the radius of thermal radiation according to wind speed were not observed, but in the case of ambient temperature and winter, the radius of thermal radiation increased with increase in wind speed.
In comparison with existing international engineering guidelines, a safety distance of 46 m (PIP PNE00003) is underestimated in all cases of capacities and atmospheric conditions, and a distance of 106.75 m (GAP.2.5.2) does not guarantee safety when the capacities presented in
Table 9 are exceeded and the weather conditions are not met.
Therefore, when setting the distance between the ethylene storage tank and the process equipment in the future, it is possible to meet the safety distance that cannot be established by existing engineering practices using the result of the Phast simulation, considering weather conditions. This study limited only one substance to be stored (ethylene), climatic conditions to three categories (ambient temperature, summer, winter), and wind speed conditions to three categories (1.5, 3, 5 m/s). However, it is expected that the same approach to the storage of different materials and different atmospheric conditions through the methodology of this study would be able to supplement the limitations of the global engineering guidelines.
5. Conclusions
Ethylene is the base material of the chemical industry and can be obtained through the process of naphtha cracking or ethylene cracking. In addition, ethylene is one of the basic constituents of a chemical plant as the scale of ethylene production is considered a measure of the chemical-industry development of a country. Ethylene occurs in the gaseous phase at ambient temperature but may be converted to the liquid phase under conditions of high pressure and low temperature, which is convenient for storage and transportation. A large amount of ethylene is stored in ethylene storage tanks, making them a major item to be considered when determining the safety distance.
The separation distance according to thermal radiation was applied in the previous studies. For thermal radiation, the explosive characteristic of the material is the most important parameter. The main factors that determine the explosiveness of each material are the Lower Flammable Limit (LFL) and the molecular weight for the dispersion radius. The environmental factors may include toxic dispersion, but this was not considered in this study because it indicated that it limited thermal radiation.
Global guidelines suggest that 37.5 kW/m2 is the limit of thermal radiation that the process equipment can experience. When leakage occurs in the ethylene storage tank, a pool forms, and fire or explosion may occur on contact with an ignition source. This study investigated the safety distance between ethylene storage tanks and process equipment. The radius of thermal radiation (37.5 kw/m2) was simulated using Phast. The trends were also analyzed for different ethylene storage capacities and weather conditions.
In the results, atmospheric stability did not affect the radius of thermal radiation. Under ambient temperature, the radius of thermal radiation increased with increase in wind speed in winter but not in summer. In addition, a regression equation was derived through polynomial fitting for each case, and all regression-equation calculations exhibited a high interpretation reliability of 99.892% on average.
In the previous studies, there has been research of the separation distance by thermal radiation. However, there have been no studies comparing the separation distance suggested by the global engineering guidelines. In the process safety engineering field like separation distance, the academic part is important, but the practical part must also be considered. This is because if only the academic part is considered, the possibility of applicability in the work-site operation is likely to be excluded. This study introduced the contents of global engineering guidelines used in work-site operation and introduced methods to compensate for the limitations of these guidelines.
International engineering guidelines include PIP PNE00003 and GAP.2.5.2. The safety distance between the ethylene storage tank and process equipment presented in PIP PNE00003 is underestimated, irrespective of the ethylene storage capacity and atmospheric conditions. The safety distance suggested by GAP.2.5.2 is applicable only under certain weather conditions and storage capacity.
Fundamentally, both PIP PNE00003 and GAP.2.5.2 offer consistent separation distances that do not consider ethylene storage capacity or weather conditions. Therefore, it is necessary to include a simulation tool, such as QRA, for precise safety-distance determination.