Showing posts with label Chemical Explosion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chemical Explosion. Show all posts

Monday, 20 January 2020

Three killed by explosion at chemical plant in Tarragona, Spain.

Three men have died and several more remain in serious conditions following an explosion at a chemical plant in the city of Tarragona in the Catalonia Region of Spain on Tuesday 14 January 2020. Two of the men worked at the plant, one of whom was killed instantly and the other died of his injuries the following day/ However, the third man, a 59-year-old identified only as Sergio, died in his home about 2.5 km from the blast, when the building was hit by the lid of the vessel in which the explosion occurred, described as a metal plate measuring 122 by 165 centimetres, and weighing about a tonne.

The trajectory followed by a metal plate thrown from an explosion at a chemical plant in Catalonia on 14 January 2020, killing a man 2.5 km from the site. El País.

The plant where the explosion occurred was manufacturing ethylene glycol, C₂H₄O, a highly volatile gas used primarily in the manufacture of ethylene glycol, which it the major component of most commercially available anti-freezes and a precursor of polyester. Ethylene oxide is an explosive gas at normal pressures and temperatures above -10°C, and is usually stored under pressure as a liquid. However, should a vessel containing ethylene oxide develop a leak, or otherwise be compromised, the escaping gas will remain explosive at even low concentrations in the atmosphere.

Fire caused by an explosion at a chemical plant in Taragona, Spain, on 14 January 2020. Reuters.

As well as being highly explosive, ethylene oxide is also toxic and carcinogenic, which led to residents of the area being ordered to remain inside their homes until it was certain that there was no release of toxic material, although the efficient combustion of the chemical proved to have made the incident safe quite quickly. In addition to the fatalities, a further seven workers at the plant were injured in the incident, with described as remaining in a serious condition at Barcelona’s Vall d’Hebron Hospital. Local civil defence authorities have expressed extreme concern that they were not informed of the event by the site's management, but rather were called by residents of the area, delaying access to the site by firefighters, who needed to ascertain the nature of the incident before entering the facility.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/10/magnitude-45-earthquake-in-cadiz.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/08/thousands-forces-to-flee-their-homes-as.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/03/bathers-warned-after-portugese-after.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2016/02/magnitude-61-earthquake-beneath-western.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/02/minor-damage-caused-by-magnitude-50.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/02/toxic-cloud-over-barcelona.html
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Sunday, 15 February 2015

Toxic cloud over Barcelona.

Residents of five towns in the Province of Barcelona, Spain, were forced to stay inside for much of the morning of Thursday 12 February 2015, after an explosion at the Simarsa chemicals plant  resulted in a fire and a cloud of toxic fumes which covered the area. The incident happened at about 9.45 am at the Les Comes industrial site in the town of Igualada, where workers were loading a truck. Quantities of two chemicals, nitric acid and ferric chloride came into contact and reacted explosively, resulting in three workers being injured and the release of a large volume of toxic vapor.

Cloud of toxic vapor over the town of Igualada in Barcelona on 12 February 2015. Cordon Press.

Around 65 360 people in the towns of Igualada, Anoia, Jorba, Odena, Vilanova del Cami and Santa Margarida de Montbui were asked to remain inside till the cloud dispersed, and rail lines and roads passing through the area were closed off temporarily. Residents were advised it was safe to leave their homes two hours after the initial incident, though it was advised that children, pregnant women, the elderly and anyone with respiratory problems remain inside for longer. Local water supplies are being investigated for contamination.

Nitric Acid is a colourless but extremely strong smelling liquid, it is highly corrosive and acts as an oxidizing agent. Exposure to the skin can cause severe chemical burns, and inhaling the vapor can result in severe respiratory problems. Ferric chloride is also corrosive and an oxidizing agent, and reacts explosively with water, a reaction which generates a great deal of heat.

See also...

Around 2.4 million people in the city of Lanzhou in northwest Gansu Province after an oil pipeline operated by the Lanzhou Petrochemical Co., a subsidiary of...


Around 300 000 people across nine counties are still without water supplies  following a chemical spill in Charleston, West Virginia, on Thursday 9 January...


On 15 January 2012 authorities in Guangxi Province in Southern China detected high levels of cadmium metal in the Longjiang River, after investigating reports of hundreds of dead fish in Hechi City. Cadmium...


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