Abstract:
Boilovers are extremely risky events that have the potential to result in catastrophic human
and material losses. The size of a boilover is dictated by the flash point, boiling point, latent
heat of vaporization and water cut of a specific crude oil. Tank fires that burn for an extended
amount of time are typically associated with boilovers. When a tank catches fire, a heat zone
is formed which rapidly converts the water in the tank bottom to steam. This results in an
abrupt volumetric expansion of approximately 1700 times more than the original liquid
inventory volume, finally erupting as a fireball. Majority of boilover incidents in the oil and
gas industry began with a tank fire, which quickly escalated to fireballs and explosions,
compounding the initial disaster numerous times. The present studysummarizes the
significant researchwork thathave beencarried out in last 3 decades to characterize the
boilover phenomenon up to this point. Experiments and theoretical studies carried out by the
previous researchers are presented in the currentpaper to understand the boilover
characteristics that can be applied to design newer experiments as well as to examine the
outcomes with previous experimentsand alsodeliberates an overview of validation models
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