The cause for the recent incident at the West Fertilizer site in Texas is under investigation and remains unknown, but many parallels can be drawn from previous similar events involving large quantities of inorganic fertilizers.
Aftermath of the mass explosion following a fire in West, Texas, April 17, 2013. Photo by REUTERS, Mike Stone. |
NH4NO3→ N2O + 2 H2O
4 NH4NO3→ 3 N2 +2 NO2 +8 H2O
(a) Unreacted NPK fertilizer granules and (b) cross section showing partially reacted sample with 4 phases visible. Photos from Hadden and Rein 2007. |
The fire could have been initiated by self-sustaining decomposition (SSD). This is the phenomenon in which the
temperature of a bed of AN-fertilizer rises due to spontaneous heat generation
until thermal runaway leads to a fire. The flames would have had then spread to other flammable materials in the plant, like supplies, fuel, packaging, offices or vehicles. SSD of fertilizers is promoted by
chemical compounds present in NPK and also the accidental contamination with organic materials. It can start at around 100 ◦C, which is a significantly lower temperatures than that required for pure AN decomposition.
A likely sequence of events is that an accidental heat source (e.g. hot work, hot surface, small fire) starts a SSD reaction in a bed on AN-fertilizer which slowly grows and leads to the fire that the Fire Service were battling. At some point, the flames grow faster than expected and rapidly heat very large quantities of AN, which leads to detonation (=explosion and blast caused by the very rapid decomposition of AN inside an enclosure).
A likely sequence of events is that an accidental heat source (e.g. hot work, hot surface, small fire) starts a SSD reaction in a bed on AN-fertilizer which slowly grows and leads to the fire that the Fire Service were battling. At some point, the flames grow faster than expected and rapidly heat very large quantities of AN, which leads to detonation (=explosion and blast caused by the very rapid decomposition of AN inside an enclosure).
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Most of the information I used is from our 2007 paper:
- R Hadden, G Rein, Small-scale experiments ofself-sustaining decomposition of NPK fertilizer and application to events aboard the Ostedijk in 2007, Journal of Hazardous Materials 186, pp 731–737, 2011. doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2010.11.047.
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