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The water contamination in fuel aviation and their solutions – Edition 2007



Partes: 1, 2

    CONTAMINATION AND CLEANUP

    Contamination    On
    its journey from refinery to aircraft fuel tank, aviation fuel
    will spend time in storage tanks and also be transferred one or
    more times. Each time a transfer occurs, there is a potential for
    contamination of the fuel to occur.

    Particulate matter and water are the most common fuel
    contaminants. Other sources of contamination include: other
    petroleum products, surfactants, microbes, and dye. This section
    will describe each type of contamination briefly, and also the
    procedures and equipment used to remove contaminants from
    aviation fuel.

    Particulate Matter   The dominant
    source of particulate matter is the solid corrosion products that
    slough off steel pipes and tanks (rust and scale). While
    protective coatings are being applied to the interior surfaces of
    more and more tanks, particularly those in critical service, the
    predominance of steel in industry facilities and the universality
    of water as a contaminant ensure that almost any distribution
    process will result in some rust contamination.

    Other sources of particulate matter are: refinery
    processing materials (catalyst fines and salts); airborne solids
    that enter through tank vents or slip past the seals of floating
    roof tanks (dust and pollen); solids from damaged hoses and
    filters (rubber particles and fibers); and solids from microbial
    infestation (cellular debris and microbial
    by-products).

    Water   Water in aviation fuels
    comes from a number of sources. Many refining processes employ
    water or steam, either directly or as heat exchanger coolant. Any
    free water picked up during processing is removed before the fuel
    leaves the refinery.

    Because most pipelines are buried, tenders tend to be
    cooled during transmission. Cooling will cause droplets of free
    water to form if the jet fuel was close to being saturated with
    water when it was injected into the pipeline. Even if the jet
    fuel was dry on injection, it may pick up free water deposited in
    low spots in the pipeline by the tenders of other
    products.

    Rain water may leak by the seals in floating-roof tanks.
    Water in moist air may condense in fixed-roof storage tanks,
    which must be vented. Air flows in and out of a fixed-roof tank
    as product is added or removed and as the air above the product
    expands or contracts in response to changes in ambient
    temperature. When warm, moist air enters during the day and is
    cooled at night, water may condense and "rain" into the fuel. The
    amount of water generated by the process depends on the relative
    humidity of the air and the difference between day and night
    temperatures; it can be significant for tanks where the climate
    is humid.

    Other Petroleum Products   If a
    batch of aviation fuel is contaminated with enough of another
    petroleum product to move one or more of the specification
    requirements off-test, there is no
    remedy. The batch must be returned to a refinery for
    reprocessing. So, aviation fuel lines and tanks are rigorously
    segregated from lines and tanks containing other products in the
    refinery and in the distribution chain.

    There are situations in which small amounts of product
    mixing may occur:

    • At the interface separating two products in a
      pipeline.
    • When aviation fuel is loaded into a compartment of a
      vessel or truck that previously contained a different
      product.

    Partes: 1, 2

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