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| Title: | Determination of the Burning Characteristics of a Slick of Oil on Water |
| Authors: | Torero, Jose L Olenick, Stephen M Garo, Jean P Vantelon, Jean P |
| Issue Date: | 2003 |
| Citation: | J.L. Torero, S.M. Olenick, J.P. Garo and J.P. Vantelon, Determination of the Burning Characteristics of a Slick of Oil on Water, Spill Science and Technology Bulletin, v.8, 4, pp.379-390, 2003. |
| Publisher: | Elsevier |
| Abstract: | The burning rate of a slick of oil on a water bed is characterized by three distinct processes,
ignition, flame spread and burning rate. Although all three processes are important, ignition and burning
rate are critical. The former, because it defines the potential to burn and the latter because of the
inherent possibility of boilover. Burning rate is calculated by a simple expression derived from a onedimensional
heat conduction equation. Heat feedback from the flame to the surface is assumed to be a
constant fraction of the total energy released by the combustion reaction. The constant fraction (c) is
named the burning efficiency and represents an important tool in assessing the potential of in-situ burning
as a counter-measure to an oil-spill. By matching the characteristic thermal penetration length scale for
the fuel/water system and an equivalent single layer system, a combined thermal diffusivity can be
calculated and used to obtain an analytical solution for the burning rate. Theoretical expressions were
correlated with crude oil and heating oil, for a number of pool diameters and initial fuel layer thickness.
Experiments were also conducted with emulsified and weathered crude oil. The simple analytical
expression describes well the effects of pool diameter and initial fuel layer thickness permitting a better
observation of the effects of weathering, emulsification and net heat feedback to the fuel surface.
Experiments showed that only a small fraction of the heat released by the flame is retained by the fuel
layer and water bed (of the order of 1%). Ignition has been studied to provide a tool that will serve to
assess a fuels ease to ignite under conditions that are representative of oil spills. Two different techniques are used, piloted ignition when the fuel is exposed to a radiant heat flux and flash point as
measured by the ASTM D56 Tag Closed Cup Test. Two different crude oils were used for these
experiments, ANS and Cook Inlet. Crude oils were tested in their natural state and at different levels of
weathering, showing that piloted ignition and flash point are strong functions of weathering level. |
| Description: | Research journal paper published in Spill Science and Technology Bulletin 2003 |
| Sponsor(s): | NIST |
| Keywords: | spill crude oil thermal penetration pool emulsified weathered |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/2643 |
| Appears in Collections: | BRE Research Publications
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