(147a) On the Catastrophic Explosion of the AZF Plant in Toulouse (September 21, 2001) | AIChE

(147a) On the Catastrophic Explosion of the AZF Plant in Toulouse (September 21, 2001)

Authors 

Guiochon, G. - Presenter, The University of Tennessee


On the Catastrophic Explosion of the AZF plant in Toulouse (September 21, 2001)

Georges Guiochon and Laurent Jacob

Department of Chemistry, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, 37996-1600, USA

During the morning of September 21, 2001, a warehouse containing ca. 300 metric tons of
production rejects of ammonium nitrate granulates exploded in the AZF/Grande Paroisse plant of
Toulouse (France), causing 31 deaths, hundreds of casualties, and enormous damages. Because
the investigation focused exclusively on the explosion itself while neglecting the chain of
precursor events that took place over hours as reported by numerous witnesses, the causes of this
event have not yet been identified. In spite of the limited documentation on precursor events, it
was possible to reconstruct parts of the chain that lead to the explosion.

The last step in the production of ammonium nitrate is the nebulization in an air countercurrent
of a hot (ca. 200oC), concentrated solution of the salt at the top of a prill tower. That day, a strong
thermal inversion prevented the normal steam plume from raising high in the air. Instead, it
spread like a pancake, carried in the NNE direction by the dominant “Autan” wind, toward a 63
kV power line. The particles of ammonium nitrate that escaped from the tower top absorbed
steam from the hot, saturated air, enlarged and fell like a soft rain on the insulators of the high
voltage pylons, causing short circuits. The first shorts were self-healing and brief but they
intensified progressively. Eventually, the ground in certain places was electrified and several
persons were electrocuted. Major electric instruments in the neighborhood and the process
control computers of several close-by plants failed, issuing rogue orders. For unexplained reasons
a major underground explosion took place in a neighbor plant, recorded as a 3.4 magnitude
earthquake. This tremor seems to have triggered the explosion of a 500 pounds bomb dropped by
RAF in 1944 but not recovered at that time and had remained buried under the warehouse. This
explosion caused that of the ammonium nitrate storage.

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