Cover image for Release : a model with data to predict aerosol rainout in accidental releases
Title:
Release : a model with data to predict aerosol rainout in accidental releases
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York : American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 1999
Physical Description:
xi, 184 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. + 1 CD-ROM
ISBN:
9780816907458
General Note:
Accompanied by CD-ROM : CP 023847
Added Author:

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30000010253520 QC880.4.D44 J64 1999 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This book documents CCPS's Aerosol Research Program to develop a model to predict liquid rainout from release of a pressurized, liquefied gas--and, hence the residual amount of material in a vapor cloud, which may be greater than the amount calculated from an enthalpy chart. RELEASE predicts the rate of fluid discharge, the depressurization, flashing and formation of liquid drops, the entrainment of drops into the vapor cloud, the subsequent spreading of the jet, and rate of liquid rainout to a pool on the ground. Designed in a modular fashion to permit adjustment and corrections as new data become available, its multi-layered approach contains sub-models that include the complexities of many variables, including the effect of liquid superheat, rate of bubble growth, criterion for bubble formation, and heat transfer from the liquid to the growing vapor bubble. To validate RELEASE, CCPS conducted small- and large-scale experiments using superheated water, heated liquefied chlorine, methylamine, and cyclohexane that produced valuable data in an area where data are scarce. This book gives complete access, in text and on CD-ROM, to the model and the test data, giving users an informed ability to apply the model to their own work.


Author Notes

David W. Johnson is the author of RELEASE: A Model with Data to Predict Aerosol Rainout in Accidental Releases, published by Wiley.

John L. Woodward is the author of RELEASE: A Model with Data to Predict Aerosol Rainout in Accidental Releases, published by Wiley.


Table of Contents

Prefacep. ix
Acknowledgmentsp. x
About This Bookp. xi
Part I Design and Results of CCPS Aerosol Field Tests
1 Introductionp. 3
2 Chronological Historyp. 5
3 Development of the Release Modelp. 7
4 Oklahoma Experimental Program (Water and CFC-11)p. 11
5 Nevada Experimental Program (Chlorine, Methylamine, and Cyclohexane)p. 19
6 Corrections to Experimental Data and Further Release Model Workp. 25
7 Summary and Future Workp. 31
Referencesp. 33
Part II Measurement and Modeling of Accidental Aerosol Releases
8 Background and Objectivesp. 37
9 Correcting Experimental Rainout Datap. 43
10 The RELEASE Model for Predicting Rainoutp. 59
11 Aerosol Drop Size Correlationp. 79
Appendix A Experimental Rainout Datap. 111
Appendix B Solar Radiation Data for Las Vegas, NVp. 125
Appendix C Theory of Model Used to Correct Rainout Datap. 131
Appendix D Additional Modeling Detailsp. 153
Appendix E Rainout Correlation Using Adiabatic Saturation Temperaturep. 161
Referencesp. 167
Nomenclaturep. 173
Indexp. 181