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Melon

(1,732 posts)
Fri May 22, 2026, 11:29 PM 5 hrs ago

MMA tank evacuation in California. Technical explanation. An answer to 10 different assumptions in different threads.


I work in chemicals and have spent time in a methyl methacrylate plant. This is MMA. It’s downstream from either acetone or more likely propianaldehyde. In the US, this is downstream from Ethylene cracked from gas.

This is the product that’s made into acrylic. All of those clear plastic screens in front of the grocery checkout are acrylic. It’s also the thick plastic used in large aquariums, bullet proof glass etc. It’s lighter than glass, safer, and at a high level doesn’t involve strip mining to produce. It’s not consumer plastic attributed to most pollution like plastic water bottles.

MMA improperly stored or having a contaminant in the tank can cause polymerization. The liquid is basically cross linking in the tank to transform into another chemical. The waste product to that reaction is heat and pressure. This is what’s happening.

The tank is too far gone and is exponentially building heat and pressure. They can cool the tank but not stop the reaction. At some point the tank can’t handle the pressure and will rupture or explode. At this point, for safety, it’s best to turn on the hoses and back all emergency crew away. There iso no stopping it. The relief valve is either broke or more likely can’t keep up with the pressure.

I will answer questions if I know the answer. I was and am not a chemist or operator.
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Melon

(1,732 posts)
4. On a relative basis... that's quite a ways.
Fri May 22, 2026, 11:57 PM
5 hrs ago

I’m not sure of the evacuation zone. If your down wind, it could be prudent to leave. The solution to pollution is dilution…..the exposure 2 miles away maybe sufficient to dilute the toxicity. I’m not an expert here because this situation, though traumatic is relatively rare. I’ve seen it occur in a tank 1 time and in a few drums. None of those ended exploding or leaking and they were with a product called VAM. .

IcyPeas

(25,820 posts)
2. Thanks.
Fri May 22, 2026, 11:40 PM
5 hrs ago

One question (hope it's not too stupid)..

Regarding the water spray... is that spray carrying any toxins?

Melon

(1,732 posts)
3. The water be sprayed on the tank is to dissipate heat.
Fri May 22, 2026, 11:53 PM
5 hrs ago

The tank is most likely going to burst. The volume of material is increasing and becoming very hot.

Early in this. Prior to the relieve valve being plugged. A remedy could have been to puncture the tank. Ie. drive a pipe through the wall of the tank or have more of a controlled spill. It’s too dangerous now.

The tank is in a cement tub. It’s designed for contaminant of spills and likely drains to a holding area or tank. It won’t hold the full tank or contain an explosion.

MMA is toxic. It doesn’t cause cancer. But you don’t want to be exposed to it or breathe it. It can cause things like nerve damage. If you’re close….leave. It’s really not worth it and the firefighters can’t stop what’s going to happen. If they cool the tank enough, maybe a small leak will occur like the relief valve on a pressure cooker. But it can just explode.

IcyPeas

(25,820 posts)
7. Local NBC news is saying it has cooled significantly
Sat May 23, 2026, 12:19 AM
5 hrs ago

Should normally be 50 degrees

Currently 60 degrees

Earlier today it was up to 95 degrees

Melon

(1,732 posts)
8. With the volumes that the chief is giving. I don't think it will rupture. There is room in the tank as long as
Sat May 23, 2026, 12:24 AM
5 hrs ago

The pressure relief valve is open.

Melon

(1,732 posts)
9. This is likely Celsius. Those number on are cold in F. A polymerization will heat a tank over 200F.
Sat May 23, 2026, 12:33 AM
4 hrs ago

orleans

(37,217 posts)
12. the live streams i'm seeing on youtube are filmed in daylight and it's one thirty in the morning in chgo
Sat May 23, 2026, 02:30 AM
2 hrs ago

so it's not that "live"

Melon

(1,732 posts)
6. I just retread an article listed on the volumes.
Sat May 23, 2026, 12:07 AM
5 hrs ago

The overall tank is 34,000 gallons. That’s slightly over a rail car of material. A rail car holds approximately 4 tanker trucks of volume to give you an understanding. The tanks can never be absolutely full.

The fire chief says that they could have a 7,000 gallon spill. That is one tanker truck. It may sound like a lot but that is not huge. It could also mean that the tank is only 1/4 full.


I would think that if that is the case. 1. The tank containment area should hold most of the spill unless it violently explodes. 2. There is a chance that the pressure bleeds with a small rupture and does not explode.

My assumption is on the volume in the tank. I could be wrong if the tank is actually full but the safety folks think that 1/4 the material would spill in a rupture. I don’t know how the chief is getting his numbers.

msongs

(74,230 posts)
11. one notices both tanks are installed in cages with sprinklers systems bathing them so this
Sat May 23, 2026, 01:40 AM
3 hrs ago

is a known hazard and possibility

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