A Modern Look at the Origins of Intra-plant Distance Tables

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Lon Santis
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
1448 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

In 1923, Ralph Assheton compiled a report for the Institute of Makers of Explosives (IME) on accidental explosions in manufacturing plants. The report chronicles the type and amount of explosive involved in the event and the effects and distances to nearby buildings and workers for over 100 events from 1880 to 1916. Apparently, this report was never published but served as the origin of the IME’s first intra-plant distance table published in Pamphlet No. 3 in 1926. The effort was a parallel effort to the IME’s development of the American Table of Distances. The intra-plant distance table has never been changed by the IME and follows the US Department of Defense (DoD) standard very closely. This paper freshly compiles the data from the 1923 report and analyzes it with modern methods not generally available in 1923. Interestingly, the analysis indicates that the original intra-plant distance tables were established primarily to protect workers from serious injury and that preventing propagation was a side benefit. The data shows that a strong relationship exists between the probability of injury and the traditional K-factor. The data indicate that people in the open are better protected than those inside structures and that barricades reduce risk close to an event. Individuals at the intra-plant distance had a 95 percent chance of receiving no worse than a minor injury. A comparison of the data to explosive event consequence models indicate the models are overly conservative in regards to risk inside inhabited building distances.
Citation

APA: Lon Santis  (2010)  A Modern Look at the Origins of Intra-plant Distance Tables

MLA: Lon Santis A Modern Look at the Origins of Intra-plant Distance Tables. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2010.

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