4.7 Article

Flash point investigation of ternary mixtures of 1-butanol/2-pentanol + acetic acid plus ethylbenzene

Journal

PROCESS SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Volume 154, Issue -, Pages 131-141

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psep.2021.08.013

Keywords

Ternary mixture; Minimum flash point behaviour; Maximum flash point behaviour; Safety; Fuel; Risk management

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Tech-nology of ROC [No.MOST 107-2221-E-992-005-MY3]

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The study investigated two ternary mixtures and their flash point behaviors, which play a crucial role in assessing the fire and explosion hazards of flammable liquids. The findings can be applied in hazard identification, hazard reduction, safety design, and risk management of ignitable waste liquids.
Flash point information is crucial for evaluating the fire and explosion (F&E) hazards of flammable liquids. Most flash point studies have investigated binary mixtures; thus, their results are inapplicable to commercial mixtures of several liquids. In this study, two ternary mixtures, namely 1-butanol - acetic acid - ethylbenzene and 2-pentanol - acetic acid - ethylbenzene, were investigated. These mixtures comprise two binary constituents with minimum flash point behavior (MinFPB) and one binary constituent with maximum flash point behavior (MaxFPB). The ternary constituents do not exhibit MinFPB or MaxFPB; therefore, the aforementioned ternary mixtures can be considered the first known members of the fp 3.3.0-1b class (Da Cunha et al., 2018). A model developed for ternary miscible mixtures was used to predict the flash point behaviors of the mixtures. The nonrandom two-liquid (NRTL), Wilson, original universal quasi-chemical functional-group activity coefficients (UNIFAC) and UNIFAC-Dortmund models were used to predict the activity coefficients of the binary and ternary constituents. The mixture of 1-butanol or 2-pentanol with acetic acid exhibited MaxFPB, indicating that acetic acid can substantially reduce the F&E risks of these alcohols. The findings can be applied in hazard identification, F&E hazard reduction, process safety design, fuel design, and the risk management of ignitable waste liquids. (C) 2021 Institution of Chemical Engineers. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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