The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog has posted incidents where
unbeknownst to company management a fire suppression system was installed and
if activated that should have never been. All too often we will
tour plants that have fire sprinklers above a container of molten metal, or in
a storage area that contains fuel sources that should be extinguished with a Class D fire extinguisher and
not water. Here is a recent incident that may have been prevent if the fire suppression
system had not been able to be activated.
An
explosion during an auto parts plant fire that ultimately stopped production of
the Ford F-150 was so violent that it threw a worker through the air into a
door jamb. Vehicles in the parking lot caught fire and were damaged by flying
debris. A fire "detector did not alert occupants."
The
explosion and a subsequent blast early the morning of May 2018 at a magnesium
factory in the USA occurred because the fire suppression system at the plant
added water to molten magnesium. Experts said that is like arming a bomb.
Firefighters
called to the factory went to the maintenance room "and looked at the
bottom of the scrap conveyor (where) we saw a white glow in the tunnel. We
exited the plant at that time,” the local Fire Chief wrote in his official
report.
The
report, made public Monday, said the plant sustained an estimated $8 million in
damage. It makes highly specialized auto parts used in Ford F-Series trucks and
several other vehicles. General Motors, Fiat Chrysler, Mercedes and Ford were
affected, with F-Series production fully shut down for eight days.
The State
Occupational Health and Safety Administration is investigating the incident.
On May
2, the fire report said, “We went to the sprinkler system … and found water was
flowing through the pipes … We saw the damage from the first explosion on the
west side of the building. I called for an engine to come to my location to
extinguish some fire in the mechanical room where no magnesium was. We started
to get the engine ready, I sent a firefighter to hook to hydrant. This is when
the second explosion occurred.”
It was
2:01 a.m.
“After
the second explosion it was reported that there were two employees injured, one
by debris that was ejected from the plant and the other employee was injured by
the blast of the explosion at the south end of the plant by the scrap tunnel
... We did not try to extinguish any fires at the plant because of the molten
mag in the area. The roof of the re-melt building caught fire and burned, there
were three machines with two crucibles each with ten thousand pounds of molten
mag in them.”
An
initial cause of the fire has not been determined.
“With
the destruction that the second and third explosions caused, it was impossible
to find what caused the first explosion,” local fire department told the local
news media. “The second and third explosions were the result of water and
molten magnesium. That was observed by myself and employees of the plant after
the first alarm was sounded.”
Another
local Fire Capt., a team leader for the County Hazardous Materials Response
Team, said firefighters would usually use Class D extinguishers on magnesium or
other metal fires because the powder would smother the oxygen of a fire and
eliminate a reaction.
“When
you’re adding little drips of water onto a magnesium fire, it’s exploding and
exploding, and all that liquid melting metal then gets onto combustible
materials like wood, fabric, carpeting, walls. And then that would start on
fire,” said the local fire department chief.
The
worker was thrown through the room because explosion causes a shock wave.
“That’s
how a bomb works,” the local fire chief said. “And this is very typical of
magnesium. Once the magnesium is ignited, it explodes when water added to it.
It’s going to be a very dynamic incident. A very dangerous incident for
firefighters and the surrounding community. They were lucky there were no
fatalities.”
Local
Fire Chief said his team simply vacated the plant immediately.
“We
didn’t fight any fire up there. Everything happened too quick," he said.
“The only thing we did is set the ladder truck up and look at the top of the
building. If there’s any mag fires, we don’t fight them. We let people at the
shop do it. But this was beyond their control. They simply evacuated.”
We pray for the injured workers. We hope they recover fully from the
injuries. The photos above show the aftermath of these explosions and fires.
Luckily no one was killed. We commend all the first responders who knew what to
do when a magnesium fire broke out.
It is our opinion that the company did not know that the fire
sprinkler system worked in that plant. Regardless, we feel confident that when
this factory is rebuilt no new fire sprinklers will be installed anywhere near
molten magnesium. In the aluminium industry one sometimes will see fire
sprinkler systems located above furnaces and in areas where dust accumulates.
We recommend that every facility have a regular scheduled inspection for fire
hazards. After identification the proper methods for extinguish those fuel
sources if they ignite should be discussed and implemented.
Even though this incident involves magnesium. The use of magnesium in our industry for alloying is commonplace. The safe handling, storage, use of magnesium is very important. In terms of extinguishing a combustible metal fire here is a good reference article.
The Aluminium Times magazine had an article about this topic of combustible metal fires. That article can be found here.
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