Abstract
An assessment of risk posed by a road transportation of liquefied gases to roadside property is considered. The attention is focussed on an estimation of the probability of thermal damage to a roadside object. Such damage can be caused by a boiling-liquid expanding-vapour explosion (BLEVE) of a road tank. It is suggested to estimate this probability by a combined application of stochastic simulation and deterministic models used to predict a thermal effect of a BLEVE fireball. A development of a fragility function expressing the probability of ignition of the roadside object is discussed. The fragility function is integrated into the simulation-based procedure of an estimation of the thermal damage probability. The approach proposed in this study is illustrated by an example which considers an assessment of thermal damage to a reservoir built in the vicinity of a road used for transportation of liquefied gases.
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Vaidogas, E. R., & Kisezauskiene, L. (2012). Transportation of liquefied gases: Assessing the risk of thermal damage to roadside infrastructure from a road tank “bleve.” Transport and Telecommunication, 13(4), 284–293. https://doi.org/10.2478/v10244-012-0024-6
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