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Inert Gas Systems (IGS)

Why This Page Exists And Why Inert Gas Is Not “Just a Tanker System”

Inert Gas Systems are often taught as:

“Keep oxygen below 8%.”

That simplification has:

• killed crew

• destroyed tankers

• caused massive pollution

• led to criminal prosecutions

Inert gas is not just about fire prevention.

It is about pressure control, gas chemistry, human factors, and discipline.

This page treats IGS as what it truly is:

A life-critical atmosphere control system operating at the edge of explosion physics.

Table of Contents

1. What an Inert Gas System Really Does

2. The Fire Triangle — And How IGS Breaks It

3. How an Inert Gas System Works (Step-by-Step, Real World)

4. Major Components — Function, Failure & Consequences

5. Types of Inert Gas Systems

6. Oxygen, Pressure & Chemistry — The Numbers That Matter

7. Operational Phases (Loading, Discharge, Ballast, Tank Cleaning)

8. Failure Modes & Accident Pathways

9. Human Factors & Historical Disasters

10. Regulations, SOLAS & Port State Reality

11. Final Engineering Takeaway

1. What an Inert Gas System Really Does

An Inert Gas System:

Reduces oxygen concentration

Controls tank pressure

Prevents explosive mixtures

Prevents air ingress

Protects tank structure

It does not:

• remove hydrocarbons

• make tanks “safe to enter”

• eliminate toxicity

• replace gas-freeing

IGS is a preventative containment system, not a cleaning system.

2. The Fire Triangle — And Where Inert Gas Attacks It

Fire requires:

1. Fuel (hydrocarbon vapour)

2. Oxygen

3. Ignition source

On tankers:

• fuel is unavoidable

• ignition sources are always possible

So IGS removes oxygen.

Critical Thresholds

• Air: ~21% O₂

• Flammable range: ~11–21% O₂

• Safe inert condition: < 8% O₂

• Target onboard: 5–7% O₂

Above this, one spark is enough.

3. How an Inert Gas System Works (Reality, Not Diagrams)

Step 1 – Gas Production

Flue Gas Source

• Boiler uptake gas

• Rich in:

• Nitrogen (N₂)

• Carbon dioxide (CO₂)

• Low oxygen by nature

Typical flue gas O₂: 2–5%

Step 2 – Scrubbing & Cooling

Hot flue gas enters the IG scrubber:

• seawater sprayed counter-flow

• removes:

• soot

• particulates

• sulphur compounds

• cools gas to safe temperature

Failure here = acidic gas entering tanks

Step 3 – Blower Pressurisation

IG blowers:

• provide flow

• maintain tank overpressure

• prevent air ingress

Typical delivery pressure:

• 200–300 mmWG above atmosphere

Blowers must:

• start automatically

• trip safely

• never overspeed

Step 4 – Oxygen Analysis

Oxygen analyser continuously samples IG:

• if O₂ > 8%:

• alarms activate

• system shuts down

• IG supply is blocked

This is the most falsified sensor on ships.

Step 5 – Deck Seal

The deck seal:

• prevents backflow of tank vapours

• uses a water column as a flame barrier

If deck seal fails:

• hydrocarbon vapours can reach:

• engine room

• boiler uptake

• hot surfaces

Several historical explosions started here.

Step 6 – Pressure/Vacuum (PV) Breakers

PV breakers:

• protect tank structure

• open on:

• overpressure

• vacuum collapse

Failure modes:

• seized pallets

• frozen drains

• incorrect settings

PV breaker malfunction = structural failure risk.

Step 7 – Distribution

IG flows via:

• master riser

• branch lines

• tank isolation valves

Poor distribution causes:

• stratification

• local oxygen pockets

• false confidence

4. Major Components — Function, Failure & Consequences

4.1 Inert Gas Generator / Source

Failure:

• boiler flame instability

• poor combustion

• high oxygen content

Consequence:

• unsafe IG delivered

• system shutdown during cargo ops

4.2 Scrubber

Failure:

• poor wash water flow

• corrosion

• sulphur carryover

Consequence:

• acidic condensation

• tank coating damage

• toxic atmosphere

4.3 IG Blowers

Failure:

• bearing failure

• vibration

• loss of capacity

Consequence:

• loss of positive pressure

• air ingress

• explosive mixture formation

4.4 Oxygen Analysers

Failure:

• sensor drift

• blocked sampling lines

• deliberate bypass

Consequence:

• system believes gas is safe when it is not

This is where criminal liability often begins.

4.5 Deck Seal

Failure:

• low water level

• frozen seal

• incorrect alignment

Consequence:

• flashback path created

Deck seal failure is unforgiving.

5. Types of Inert Gas Systems

5.1 Flue Gas Inert Gas Systems

Advantages

• simple

• low capital cost

• proven

Disadvantages

• depends on boiler operation

• sulphur contamination

• less precise oxygen control

Common on:

• older crude/product tankers

5.2 Nitrogen Inert Gas Systems

Advantages

• high purity nitrogen

• independent of boilers

• precise oxygen control

Disadvantages

• higher cost

• power consumption

Common on:

• chemical tankers

• LNG/LPG carriers

• modern product tankers

5.3 Membrane Inert Gas Systems

Advantages

• compact

• energy efficient

• modular

Disadvantages

• limited capacity

• sensitive to contamination

Used on:

• smaller vessels

• offshore units

6. Oxygen, Pressure & Chemistry — Numbers That Matter

Parameter Typical Limit

Oxygen in IG < 8%

Target O₂ in tanks 5–7%

IG temperature < 65°C

Tank pressure +200 mmWG

CO₂ content 12–14%

Small deviations = large risk.

7. Operational Phases & IGS Behaviour

Loading

• IG must maintain overpressure

• oxygen trending critical

• failure = loading stop

Discharge

• IG replaces cargo volume

• prevents vacuum

• stabilises atmosphere

Ballast Voyage

• tanks remain inerted

• oxygen creep monitored

Tank Cleaning

IG must be isolated

• ventilation required

• many fatalities occur here

8. Failure Modes & Accident Pathways

8.1 Air Ingress During Discharge

Cause:

• blower failure

• PV breaker malfunction

Result:

• explosive mixture forms unnoticed

8.2 False Oxygen Readings

Cause:

• blocked sampling

• sensor poisoning

• deliberate tampering

Result:

• unsafe gas accepted as safe

8.3 Deck Seal Loss

Cause:

• poor maintenance

• freezing

• incorrect filling

Result:

• flashback potential

8.4 Human Error During Tank Entry

Cause:

• misunderstanding “inert”

• bypassed permits

• time pressure

Result:

• asphyxiation or explosion

9. Human Factors & Historical Lessons

Most IGS accidents involve:

• complacency

• poor training

• misunderstood alarms

• “temporary” bypasses

IGS does not forgive shortcuts.

10. Regulatory Framework & Enforcement

Core Regulations

• SOLAS Chapter II-2

• IBC Code

• IGC Code

• Class rules (DNV, LR, ABS)

Port State Focus

• oxygen analyser calibration

• deck seal condition

• alarm functionality

• crew knowledge

Failures can:

• detain vessel

• stop cargo ops

• void insurance

• trigger criminal investigation

Final Engineering Takeaway

Inert Gas Systems do not prevent explosions by luck.

They prevent them by continuous discipline.

The system assumes:

• sensors tell the truth

• valves are aligned correctly

• crew understand invisible risks

When any one of those fails:

the ship becomes a bomb.

IGS is not a background system.

It is a constant guardian that must never be ignored.