IC 6805 The Explosion and Fire Hazards of Hydrocarbon-Carbon Tetrachloride Mixtures

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 1219 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 1, 1934
Abstract
Most gasolines and naphthas are mixtures of paraffin- series hydrocarbons
and comprise such substances as pentane , hexane , heptane , octane , and others
up to perhaps dodecane . Many of these hydrocarbons , when mixed with the
proper proportions of air and ignited , are highly explosive . It is due to
this characteristic that gasoline has become so important as a fuel in
internal -combustion engines . Gasoline and naphtha also are used in the industry
as solvents and cleaning agents . Because of their explosive properties
they are dangerous to use unless the composition is so chosen that the vapor
pressure of the mixture is not high enough to produce explosive mixtures with
air at the temperature at which they are used .
Hydrocarbon mixtures may be made less hazardous by adding some incombustible
liquid , such as carbon tetrachloride . Barrier reports the amount of
carbon tetrachloride that must be added to different naphthas to render such
mixtures free from fire and explosion hazards . He found that the amount of
carbon tetrachloride that must be present in the final mixture of naphtha and
carbon tetrachloride varied with the density of the naphtha . Of the naphthas
tested the amount of carbon tetrachloride necessary to render such mixtures
free from fire and explosion hazards ranged from 30 to 70 percent .
..
Determination of the fire and explosion hazards of carbon tetrachloridehydrocarbon
mixtures would be easy if the boiling points and vapor pressures
of the two were the same at any given temperature . The fact that carbon
tetrachloride boils at 76° C. while the boiling points of the hydrocarbons
found in gasoline and naphtha may range from 37° , the boiling point of pentane ,
Citation
APA:
(1934) IC 6805 The Explosion and Fire Hazards of Hydrocarbon-Carbon Tetrachloride MixturesMLA: IC 6805 The Explosion and Fire Hazards of Hydrocarbon-Carbon Tetrachloride Mixtures. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1934.