The Dangers of Nitrogen ( N 2 )!. N 2 Hazards Objectives: Understand the characteristics and health hazards pertaining to Nitrogen. Know the first-aid.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
60% of deaths come about when someone tries to rescue someone else!
Advertisements

Facts for life Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Properties of Carbon Monoxide Carbon monoxide is an odourless, tasteless and colourless gas. It is toxic to.
MDPI/GOODWILL OIL AND GAS TRAINING
US Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board The Hazards of Nitrogen Asphyxiation.
CARBON MONOXIDE.
Module 9 Confined Space.
Chris Landau (Geologist) June 22, Broken Promises (BP) well spews the lethal and carcinogenic gases of hydrogen sulfide, sulfur dioxide and benzene.
Fire Fighter Level I Personal Protective Equipment
First Responder Basic SAR Training May 2011 Module 3: Safety.
Slide 1 (of 31) Confined Space Training Permit-Required Confined Spaces.
1/05 School Safety Training Permit-Required Confined Spaces WAC Part M.
Trenching and Excavation Safety.  About 400 workers die in the U.S. every year and about 6500 are seriously injured in trenching and excavation related.
Chemical Safety. Overview Chemical hazard classes Communication of hazards Routes of exposure Hierarchy of controls Special laboratory hazards.
Basic Nitrogen Safety Course San Juan College Regional Energy Training Center.
Handling Liquid Cryogens Safely Tony Kent School of Physics and Astronomy.
Fatal Incident Involving a Temporary Enclosure at a Chemical Facility From an OSHA Technical Information Bulletin.
Arc Welding. What is Arc Welding?  Generalized term used to describe welding that uses an electric arc between an electrode and the base material to.
Permit Required Confined Space Entry Standard 29 CFR Part Presented by: Winton-Ireland, Strom & Green Insurance Agency Inc.
W Each year over 200 people die from CO poisoning and over 5000 are injured. W CO causes more accidental poisonings than any other chemical in the U.
CONSUMED BY FUMES HAZARDS OF AGRICULTURAL GASES. Learning Objectives Understanding the types of respiratory hazards Identifying hazardous atmospheres.
PREPARED BY: NATIONAL STEPS NIOSH OSHA OIL & GAS INDUSTRY REPRESENTATIVES Tank Gauging Hazard Alert Gauging, Thieving, Fluid Handling.
H2S H2S Awareness Introduction
EVERY YEAR HUNDREDS OF WORKERS ARE INJURED OR KILLED IN CONFINED SPACES. IGNORANCE OR OVERCONFIDENCE IS USUALLY THE CAUSE OF SUCH ACCIDENTS. WORKERS WHO.
Department of Fire Services Training Division Carbon Monoxide Emergency Familiarization and Suggested Operational Guidelines T. Dustin Alward Massachusetts.
PERMIT REQUIRED CONFINED SPACES PERMIT REQUIRED CONFINED SPACES.
Confined Space Ventilation Are We Really Moving Air, or Just Making Ourselves Feel Good?
Silent Killer in a Newly Constructed Manhole. Reason For the Intervention OSHA received notification of a construction site fatality on August 5, 2004.
Safety Meeting H2S EDM Services, Inc. February 2010.
HYDROGEN SULFIDE (H2S) AWARENESS TRAINING
1 BUILDING TRADE SAFETY CONFINED SPACES. 2 BUILDING TRADE SAFETY Confined spaces.
Confined Space Safety Training Presentations
Hazard Communication. SAFETY The purpose of OSHA Hazard Communication Standard is to ensure that the hazards of all chemicals produced or imported are.
Without reference, identify principles about Anesthesia Units with at least 70 percent accuracy.
Types of Gases WELDING Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights reserved.
Copyright  Business & Legal Reports, Inc. BLR’s Safety Training Presentations Permit-Required Confined Spaces 29 CFR
Copyright  Progressive Business Publications Permit-Required Confined Space Safety Subpart J.
Permit-Required Confined Spaces 29 CFR Why Comply???? Confined space entry is a leading cause of occupational fatalities in this country.
CONFINED SPACE We are going to start this class with a small quiz. The purpose of the quiz is to allow you to determine where you are and what you know.
Liquid Ingenuity. Innovative Effective Dedicated Quietly Confident January 2014 CONFINED SPACES.
Permit-Required Confined Space Safety
Middle East Gases Association Oxygen Deficiency Iyad Sawalha, Air Products Dubai | 5 December 2013.
Tyson Burt Mathieu Gagnon
1 Confined Space Safety 2 Why Are Confined Spaces Dangerous? Hazards are not obvious Lack of ventilation Difficult for: –Employees to exit –Rescue teams.
HAZWOPER: Awareness Level 29 CFR (q). Headline Stories Ammonia Evacuates Industrial Site Acid Spill Sends Workers to Hospital Fuel Spill Contaminate.
Heat Stress Management. Objective  It is the policy of CSP to provide equipment necessary to prevent injury in the event of exposure to high ambient.
Adapted from Boy Scouts of America Series : Wilderness Survival
Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.
Confined Spaces in Construction
WELLINGTON COUNTY SILO GAS AND HAZARD AWARNESS. Learning Outcomes The participant will:  Discuss gases formed in farm silos  Discuss hazards and characteristics.
Must Do Determine which of the body plane diagrams show: 1.Sagittal 2.Coronal 3.Transverse Body Planes ABC.
Carbon Dioxide So what’s the problem? It can’t be THAT bad! Unless you lived around Lake Nios, Cameroon in August 1986…
TRENCHING & EXCAVATION
What is a safe work permit? A safe work permit is a written record that authorizes specific work, at a specific work location, for a specific.
‘ TIPP ’ T raining & I nformation P owerpoint P resentation H 2 S : The Basics.
Excavation & Trench Safety
Copyright  Business & Legal Reports, Inc. BLR’s Safety Training Presentations Permit-Required Confined Spaces 29 CFR
RESPIRATORY TRAINING. Objectives + Why are respirators are necessary + Capabilities & Limitations + Inspecting & Maintaining + Medical Clearance & Fit.
August 2015 CONFINED SPACE AWARENESS TRAINING. Pre-Meeting Notes ◦ Remember to review the notes section of the presentation prior to presenting ◦ Begin.
MANAGEMENT AND FACILITY SAFETY. Your job is to enforce the rules and regulations. Your managers job is to make sure you are in compliance with the laws.
CARBON MONOXIDE.  Carbon Monoxide (CO) is: Colorless Odorless Tasteless  Each year many people die from CO poisoning.  CO can act on the body quickly.
Excavation & Trenching Awareness Plus
Trench Hazards Introduce the module. Trenching & Excavations Continuing Education Third Quarter 2017 Session 3.
CONFINED SPACE ENTRY TRAINING PROGRAM
Confined Space.
Environmental and Safety Concerns with SF6 Gas
Nitrogen: The Silent Killer
Carbon Monoxide.
Process Safety Management Ammonia Awareness
CONFINE SPACE.
Presentation transcript:

The Dangers of Nitrogen ( N 2 )!

N 2 Hazards Objectives: Understand the characteristics and health hazards pertaining to Nitrogen. Know the first-aid measures for treating victims of Nitrogen exposure.

Confined Space Injury and Fatality: Two workers at a Union Carbide plant in Louisiana were inspecting a flange surface on a 48” diameter pipe using a black light to detect residual organic chemicals. They draped black plastic over the end of the pipe to create shade so the black light would illuminate surface deposits. The workers were unaware that some 50m away, N 2 was being injected into the system to protect new catalyst from exposure to moisture.

When the two men entered the black cover, they quickly lost consciousness from lack of oxygen. A passerby noticed an arm sticking out from the plastic and immediately called for help. Confined Space Injury and Fatality (continued):

One man died, and the other was seriously injured. Incidentally, one of the victim’s had helped start the N 2 purge on the system the day before.

Confined Space Fatality: In the early morning hours of his shift, a BP refinery employee was performing a gas test at the top manhole of a reactor while the equipment was being purged with N 2 for catalyst unloading. The employee was found dead in the bottom of the reactor vessel. The N 2 purge had reduced the oxygen concentration near the manhole to dangerously low levels.

While it is widely known that exposure to excessive amounts of N 2 inside purged equipment can result in swift death, the fact that people can be equally affected while standing near openings of N 2 purged equipment may be less understood. This situation must not be underestimated! Confined Space Fatality:

NITROGEN - Friend or Foe? Our success working around Nitrogen will have much to do with the way we treat Nitrogen. It is considered non-hazardous, it is listed along with other utilities on some sites, thus we can often be lulled into a false sense of security and complacency. As a gas, nitrogen is a “silent-killer” (as noted by the effects on the body due to a lack of adequate ventilation). Because of the many recent Nitrogen exposures incidents in the chemical industry, we want to ensure that everyone understands the hazards and effects of exposure.

Nitrogen: an introduction Nitrogen is a nontoxic, ordorless, colorless, tasteless non-flammable gas. 78% (by volume) of the air we breathe is nitrogen. Oxygen constitutes approximately 21%. When Nitrogen concentrations increase (eg: when purging equipment) and the oxygen levels drop below 19.5%, rapid suffocation can occur. While some chemicals or substances may effect some of us to a greater degree than it will others based on our tolerance to the substance, Nitrogen will not. Nitrogen will effect every individual the same way: it displaces oxygen. Without enough oxygen, we die.

Nitrogen: an introduction (cont.) Discovered in 1772, nitrogen is non-detectable by any of the human senses (no smell, no taste, invisible, no sound, no feeling). Nitrogen is non-flammable and weighs approximately the same as air. Inhalation of a Nitrogen enriched atmosphere (ie: loss of oxygen) may cause dizziness, drowsiness, nausea, vomiting, excess salivation, diminished mental alertness, loss of consciousness, and ultimately: death.

Health Information Nitrogen gas is classified as a “simple asphyxiant”. This means Nitrogen will displace oxygen and create oxygen deficient (<19.5%) atmospheres without significant physiologic effects. Exposure limits are not normally given to “simple asphyxiants” because the limiting factor is the available oxygen. Therefore, Nitrogen has no exposure limit. In addition to being an inhalation hazard, Liquid Nitrogen is a colorless, odorless, and extremely cold liquid (-200 DegC). Contact with this liquid or the cold vapors can cause severe frostbite.

What Makes Us Breathe? Breathing is stimulated and controlled by carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) present in the lungs. As the CO 2 level increases, the brain sends a message to increase respiration. When the CO 2 level drops, the rate of respiration will also decrease in order to maintain the proper balance. Everyone should understand that one deep breath of 100% N 2 will be fatal. 100% N 2 will displace CO 2 and O 2 completely. And, in the absence of a CO 2 signal to the brain, the stimulus to breath no longer exists! You will stop breathing!!

First-Aid Measures Nitrogen Inhalation: Call for help and remove victims to fresh air as quickly as possible. BUT: make sure, YOU are protected ! Obtain help from trained personnel immediately. If not breathing, trained personnel should administer supplemental oxygen and/or cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR), if necessary.