2023 Spring Meeting and 19th Global Congress on Process Safety
(7b) Case Study: Investigating the Effect of the A2 Pasquill Atmospheric Condition on the Dispersion Modelling of Heavy Gases
The A2 Pasquill case describes unstable weather conditions with the steepest vertical temperature gradients due to which dense gases are pushed downward and cause pollutants to concentrate at ground level. Although the A2 case is low in likelihood, due to the vertical temperature gradient it has the greatest potential to cause a vapor plume to disperse downward to the grade level. Thus, adding the A2 Pasquill case as another standard weather parameter will generate models that predict the worst-case scenarios for ground-level concentrations, especially for scenarios where the release is at height, e.g. atmospheric vents
The goal of this study is to demonstrate the advantage of using the A2 parameter to encompass the most severe dense gas release events. For this investigation, 21 case studies of common hydrocarbon and aromatic mixtures were developed in PHAST (Process Hazard Analysis Software Tool). Each case varied in temperature, release pressure (velocity), and molecular weight (MW) to simulate dense gases that are likely to tend towards ground level. Subsequently, each case study was modelled with the A2, D5, and F2 conditions to visualize the dispersion of dense gases under the different weather conditions and to evaluate which weather parameter would be most inclusive of high-severity scenarios.
Results demonstrate that dense (colder than dew point, heavy, pressurized) gases yield highest ground-level concentration using A2 atmospheric condition. Moreover, the further the release temperature falls below the dew point of the mixture, the greater the liquid content of the release, and the greater the mixture concentration at ground level, therefore making it even more critical to use a model that is conservative in its estimation of ground-level concentrations.
This study provides a defensible argument for the inclusion of the A2 Pasquill weather parameter in dispersion modeling, in addition to the typical F2 and D5. It conservatively models gas releases that concentrate at ground level, thus allowing for a more robust design of vent heights and surrounding structures/equipment, as well as the administration of more robust safety measures.