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the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Diploma

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VioletQueen
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the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Diploma

Post by VioletQueen »

I have a question regarding UNIT C NEBOSH Diploma

What factors that may affect the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system used in a powdered aluminum process ?
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by jonsi »

I don't know much about the topic and I may be way off beam here but here goes...

...powdered aluminium (powdered anything really) can be explosive given the right conditions. To prevent fire you need to take away one element of the fire triangle. Nitrogen inerting systems replace the oxygen in that triangle but only if it is constantly present - like in some aircraft fuel systems. If it were constantly present then the lack of O2 in the atmosphere would be dangerous to humans (asphyxiation risk) because we aren't built to rapidly detect low oxygen atmospheres. If it's designed solely as responsive to fire then it wouldn't react quickly enough to prevent a powder explosion and may even get damaged as a result, rendering it either useless as a fire control or an additional hazard. There's also the safety issue of storage of the liquid nitrogen (temperature / accidental release / pressure vessels etc. etc.).

Not necessarily factors that affect reliability but maybe ones that affect selection?
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by bernicarey »

I think jonsi has about covered it.

Nitrogen inerting is used to prevent explosions by replacing the air (i.e. Oxygen) that is normally present.

It can never really react fact enough to prevent an explosion by use of a reactive system, i.e. like a CO2 or Halon fixed installation that reacts to a fire alarm.

In a powder environment, you have to get the substance in and out of the sealed environment where you have the nitrogen atmosphere.

Aircraft fuel tanks is easy, you just replace the volume of fuel liquid with the gas as the level drops, or purge the tank once empty of fuel, depending on the design requirements. Incidentally, such systems are not that common, even in military aircraft. Certain models of commercial airliners do have such systems, or there is the potential installation of such systems, depending on identified risks.
For many years, aircraft safety has relied on the absence of the ignition source, rather than the removal of the oxygen.
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by VioletQueen »

jonsi wrote:I don't know much about the topic and I may be way off beam here but here goes...

...powdered aluminium (powdered anything really) can be explosive given the right conditions. To prevent fire you need to take away one element of the fire triangle. Nitrogen inerting systems replace the oxygen in that triangle but only if it is constantly present - like in some aircraft fuel systems. If it were constantly present then the lack of O2 in the atmosphere would be dangerous to humans (asphyxiation risk) because we aren't built to rapidly detect low oxygen atmospheres. If it's designed solely as responsive to fire then it wouldn't react quickly enough to prevent a powder explosion and may even get damaged as a result, rendering it either useless as a fire control or an additional hazard. There's also the safety issue of storage of the liquid nitrogen (temperature / accidental release / pressure vessels etc. etc.).

Not necessarily factors that affect reliability but maybe ones that affect selection?

Thank You JONSI for your brief explanation .compress

I found in the search these factor but i don't understand them well.

The location and number of sampling points
The type and calibration of the sensor
The possibility of contaminants in the system interfering with the readings
Inadequate supply of inerting gas
The number of locations where air might enter the plant or process
The safe means of shutdown if oxygen levels become too high
The reliability of electronic control system


Why we need the sampling points and calibration ? what are the sensor types ?
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by VioletQueen »

bernicarey wrote:I think jonsi has about covered it.

Nitrogen inerting is used to prevent explosions by replacing the air (i.e. Oxygen) that is normally present.

It can never really react fact enough to prevent an explosion by use of a reactive system, i.e. like a CO2 or Halon fixed installation that reacts to a fire alarm.

In a powder environment, you have to get the substance in and out of the sealed environment where you have the nitrogen atmosphere.

Aircraft fuel tanks is easy, you just replace the volume of fuel liquid with the gas as the level drops, or purge the tank once empty of fuel, depending on the design requirements. Incidentally, such systems are not that common, even in military aircraft. Certain models of commercial airliners do have such systems, or there is the potential installation of such systems, depending on identified risks.
For many years, aircraft safety has relied on the absence of the ignition source, rather than the removal of the oxygen.
Hello BERNICAREY ... Thank you for your continuous support for us.. appreciated

Same what i wrote for JONSI

The location and number of sampling points
The type and calibration of the sensor
The possibility of contaminants in the system interfering with the readings
Inadequate supply of inerting gas
The number of locations where air might enter the plant or process
The safe means of shutdown if oxygen levels become too high
The reliability of electronic control system

Why we need the sampling points and calibration ? what are the sensor types ?

Thank you ... My exams B and C will be 4th and 5th JULY 2012 .... :)
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by bernicarey »

Why we need the sampling points and calibration ? what are the sensor types ?

Well you will need sampling points to ensure that the Nitrogen levels are at the correct level throughout the controlled atmosphere. There may be atmosphere leakage in or out and levels need to be maintained.

Any sampling would be by a sensor system, and any sensor needs to be calibrated.
I have no idea how such a sensor system would operate. The internet is your friend, here's an example I found...
http://enviro-analytical.com/processins ... h2_n2.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: the reliability of a nitrogen inerting system Unit C Dip

Post by VioletQueen »

bernicarey wrote:
Why we need the sampling points and calibration ? what are the sensor types ?

Well you will need sampling points to ensure that the Nitrogen levels are at the correct level throughout the controlled atmosphere. There may be atmosphere leakage in or out and levels need to be maintained.

Any sampling would be by a sensor system, and any sensor needs to be calibrated.
I have no idea how such a sensor system would operate. The internet is your friend, here's an example I found...
http://enviro-analytical.com/processins ... h2_n2.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

MilliooooooonThanks BERNICAREY :oops:

... Studying Time .... 11 Days left to Examination time 8)
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