A fuel tanker crash or fire requires a 40-50 m radius response zone on highways. NFPA 385 (Tank Vehicles for Flammable and Combustible Liquids) defines tanker construction and transport, while NFPA 11 covers foam attack. The biggest threat: LPG/LNG tankers prone to BLEVE (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion) producing a 300 m fireball.

Tanker Types and Risk

MC-331 LPG tankers are the highest BLEVE risk.

BLEVE Mechanism

BLEVE stages:

  1. External fire heats tank wall
  2. Liquid exceeds boiling point (superheat)
  3. Tank wall metallurgically weakens (>650 C)
  4. Crack propagates; sudden pressure drop flashes liquid
  5. Ignited vapor cloud creates 300-500 m fireball

Time window is 10-30 min depending on tank insulation. Water cooling delays BLEVE.

Response Strategy

In-Tunnel Tanker Scenarios

Mont Blanc 1999 and Frejus 2005 tunnel fires measured tanker HRR >200 MW. NFPA 502 requires for in-tunnel tanker fires:

Tanker response water flow with SprinkCalc

SprinkCalc sizes deluge nozzle count, foam concentrate and 60-min water reserve for tanker cooling per NFPA 11.

Download SprinkCalc on the App Store
Sources & Further Reading

NFPA 385, NFPA 11, NFPA 502, DOT 49 CFR 178, CDI/ICI BLEVE Guidelines. NFPA 385 Tank Vehicles standard.

FS

Fatih Selvi

Mechanical engineer and software developer. 16+ years of MEP and fire protection experience.