The Effects of Ambient Temperature and Atmospheric Humidity on the Diffusion Dynamics of Hydrogen Fluoride Gas Leakage Based on the Computational Fluid Dynamics Method

Toxics. 2024 Feb 28;12(3):184. doi: 10.3390/toxics12030184.

Abstract

In order to investigate the impact of environmental temperature and atmospheric humidity on the leakage and diffusion of hydrogen fluoride (HF) gas, this study focused on the real scenario of an HF chemical industrial park. Based on the actual dispersion scenario of HF gas, a proportionally scaled-down experimental platform for HF gas leakage was established to validate the accuracy and feasibility of numerical simulations under complex conditions. Using the validated model, the study calculated the complex scenarios of HF leakage and diffusion within the temperature range of 293 K to 313 K and the humidity range of 0% to 100%. The simulation results indicated that different environmental temperatures had a relatively small impact on the hazardous areas (the lethal area, severe injury area, light injury area, and maximum allowable concentration (MAC) area) formed by HF gas leakage. At 600 s of dispersion, the fluctuation range of hazardous area sizes under different temperature conditions was between 3.11% and 13.07%. In contrast to environmental temperature, atmospheric relative humidity had a more significant impact on the dispersion trend of HF leakage. Different relative humidity levels mainly affected the areas of the lethal zone, light injury zone, and MAC zone. When HF continued to leak and disperse for 600 s, compared to 0% relative humidity, 100% relative humidity reduced the lethal area by 35.7%, while increasing the light injury area and MAC area by 27.26% and 111.6%, respectively. The impact on the severe injury area was relatively small, decreasing by 1.68%. The results of this study are crucial for understanding the dispersion patterns of HF gas under different temperature and humidity conditions.

Keywords: Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD); ambient temperature; atmospheric humidity; hydrogen fluoride (HF); leakage dispersion.