Corinaldesi, Ilaria
 
(2018)
Equipment vulnerability models for the assessment of domino effect caused by fire.
[Laurea magistrale], Università di Bologna, Corso di Studio in 
Ingegneria chimica e di processo [LM-DM270], Documento full-text non disponibile
  
 
  
  
        
        
	
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
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      Abstract
      Domino effect is considered one of the principal potential harms for major accident scenarios in chemical and process industry. It can be defined as a propagation of the primary event due to escalation vectors, generated by the physical effects of the primary scenario, resulting in an overall scenario more severe than the primary event that triggered the escalation. 
Over the last years, this growing concern leads to introduce the assessment of domino effect in the Quantitative Risk Analysis, as can be read in the Seveso Directives.
This thesis work focused on the definition of a new vulnerability models for equipment exposed to fire, capable to take into account not only the characteristics of the targets but also the space and time evolution of the heat radiation. In particular, two probit equations, one for atmospheric tanks and one for pressurized tanks, have been developed. 
The first part of the study is dedicated to the definition of the dose and of the probit coefficients, using data sets derived from previous publications.
Subsequently, some accidental scenarios were chosen in order to evaluate the validity of these equations and then, results obtained with the new method were compared to those ones obtained with a threshold values approach.
In the final part of the work, the procedure developed has been applied to a case study.
     
    
      Abstract
      Domino effect is considered one of the principal potential harms for major accident scenarios in chemical and process industry. It can be defined as a propagation of the primary event due to escalation vectors, generated by the physical effects of the primary scenario, resulting in an overall scenario more severe than the primary event that triggered the escalation. 
Over the last years, this growing concern leads to introduce the assessment of domino effect in the Quantitative Risk Analysis, as can be read in the Seveso Directives.
This thesis work focused on the definition of a new vulnerability models for equipment exposed to fire, capable to take into account not only the characteristics of the targets but also the space and time evolution of the heat radiation. In particular, two probit equations, one for atmospheric tanks and one for pressurized tanks, have been developed. 
The first part of the study is dedicated to the definition of the dose and of the probit coefficients, using data sets derived from previous publications.
Subsequently, some accidental scenarios were chosen in order to evaluate the validity of these equations and then, results obtained with the new method were compared to those ones obtained with a threshold values approach.
In the final part of the work, the procedure developed has been applied to a case study.
     
  
  
    
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di laurea
(Laurea magistrale)
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore della tesi
          Corinaldesi, Ilaria
          
        
      
        
          Relatore della tesi
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Scuola
          
          
        
      
        
          Corso di studio
          
          
        
      
        
          Indirizzo
          Ingegneria di processo
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ordinamento Cds
          DM270
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          Domino effect,Equipment vulnerability models,Probit functions,Fire
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione della Tesi
          14 Giugno 2018
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
    Altri metadati
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di laurea
(NON SPECIFICATO)
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore della tesi
          Corinaldesi, Ilaria
          
        
      
        
          Relatore della tesi
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Scuola
          
          
        
      
        
          Corso di studio
          
          
        
      
        
          Indirizzo
          Ingegneria di processo
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ordinamento Cds
          DM270
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          Domino effect,Equipment vulnerability models,Probit functions,Fire
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione della Tesi
          14 Giugno 2018
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
      Gestione del documento: 
      
        