September-October 2006

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When Storms Kill the Power Grid, Generators Can Keep the Hurricane Center Alive

When a hurricane threatens anywhere in the Western Hemisphere, the National Hurricane Center in Miami becomes a maelstrom of meteorological activity.

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By George Leposky

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To keep everyone comfortable and productive, and to maintain the operational integrity of the computers and electronics, the generators provide enough capacity to air-condition the entire building. The main climate-control system employs variable-air-volume boxes to create 63 discrete zones, allowing the temperature in one area to be changed without affecting the rest of the building. Two 60-ton Trane condenser units serve the operations area and a 40-ton Trane condenser unit supplies the administrative offices. Each condenser unit has four compressors and an individual air handler.

“The two 60-ton units don‘t run at same time,” Moss says. “We rotate them every 72 hours, so we don’t put all the hours on one unit.”

A separate air-conditioning system supplies chilled air to a plenum floor in the main computer room, providing precise, reliable control of room temperature, humidity, and air flow to dissipate heat generated by the powerful computers in the room. This specialized system consists of three Liebert System 3 units from Liebert Corp. of Columbus, OH, each with a 15-ton condenser.

Thanks to Andrew
When Hurricane Andrew blew through southern Florida in 1992, the NHC was located in a 12-story office building across from the University of Miami in Coral Gables. “We were going to move anyway, but Andrew speeded it up,” says Judd. “The radar was on top of the building. Andrew blew it right off.”

The current building opened in 1995. It occupies slightly more than three acres on the main campus of Florida International University, which leased the site to the federal government for $1 a year. Located 16 miles west of downtown Miami, the low, fortress-like structure has 10-inch-thick walls of concrete reinforced with steel rebar.

The building occupies a site on the edge of the Everglades. At this location, flooding due to torrential rains during a hurricane or tropical storm is a concern but not a problem. Although the surrounding terrain is just 7 feet above mean sea level, the building sits atop a raised mound at an elevation of 12 feet, enough to keep it high and dry even when floodwaters surround it. “During Hurricane Irene in 1999 and an unnamed storm in October of 2000, our building was an island,” recalls Russell L. “Rusty” Pfost, the local forecast office meteorologist-in-charge.

The site is far enough from the ocean that a hurricane storm surge wouldn’t reach it. A nearby canal could overflow if enough rain were to fall during a storm, but that hasn’t happened and is anticipated to occur only once in more than 100 years.

“We’ve never had water in the building—not even close,” Judd says. “After Irene, the water was pretty much gone after one day. We planted Fakahatchee grass that acts like a marsh to help keep the water at bay, and the limestone rock underneath us is a benefit in helping the water level decrease rapidly. The limestone is porous and sucks the water right down.”

“We have steel shutters on every window, and large panels on the doors,” says Pfost. “Putting them up is a huge undertaking because the building is so large. Once we get them up, they usually stay up for the entire season, even though they make the interior really dark.”

Ample Fuel Supply
The generator installation was designed and constructed at the same time as the main building. It occupies a separate structure adjacent to the back door of the main building. The generator building, also constructed of reinforced concrete walls 10 inches thick, is 40 feet long, 27.75 feet wide, and 25 feet high. The main building and the generator building both have a 125-mph wind rating.

Between the generator building and a service drive stands a 10,000-gallon diesel-fuel tank made by Convault Inc., of Denair, CA. The welded stainless-steel tank is surrounded by a quarter-inch of Styrofoam insulation, which in turn is wrapped in an impervious membrane of 30-mil high-density polyethylene to contain any leaks from the tank and to guard the tank against corrosion. Then this package is encased in a 6-inch-thick vault of reinforced concrete, poured all at once so it won’t have joints or heat sinks. The monolithic concrete vault provides two-hour fire protection as well as ballistic and vehicle-impact protection. An exterior coating of water-based epoxy paint protects the tank from extreme weather conditions. The exterior of the vault is 29.5 feet long, 7.75 feet wide, and 7.5 feet tall.

In addition, each generator has a “day tank” that holds 150 gallons. The diesel fuel is treated with additives to prevent sludge formation.

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An automated liquid level-control system from Pneumercator Inc., of Farmingdale, NY, manages the process of refilling the individual day tanks. When a day tank reaches the half-empty mark, sensors turn on a pump that draws diesel fuel from the large outdoor tank through .75-inch black pipe enclosed in four-inch PVC pipe. The piping rises from the top of the outdoor tank, crosses above the walkway between the tank and the generator building, and penetrates the side wall of the generator building. The Pneumercator system employs point level controls based on float-actuated level switches, a fuel gauge for the outdoor tank, and a test device that monitors the system for leaks and sounds a loud alarm if a leak is detected.

As a storm approaches, Moss tops off the tanks so enough fuel will be on hand to run the generators for a couple of weeks—far longer than any outage the building has endured in its 10-year history. “We’ve got a high priority with FP&L, second to the hospitals,” Moss says. “Because we’re in the lifesaving business as well, we’re normally not out for too long, and we can usually get fuel within three days.”

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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