01/02/2026
1οΈβ£ Flash Point (π₯ Momentary ignition)
What it is:
The lowest temperature at which a liquid gives off enough vapour to ignite momentarily when an external ignition source (spark/flame) is applied.
Key behavior:
Vapour ignites briefly
Flame does NOT sustain
Once ignition source is removed β fire goes out
HSE meaning:
π Liquid is dangerous, but not self-sustaining
π Hot work near such liquids is high risk
Example:
Petrol flash point β -43Β°C
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2οΈβ£ Fire Point (π₯π₯ Sustained burning)
What it is:
The temperature at which the liquid produces enough vapour to continue burning even after the ignition source is removed.
Key behavior:
Fire continues on its own
Vapour generation is continuous
HSE meaning:
π Once fire point is reached, fire will not self-extinguish
π Requires firefighting intervention
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3οΈβ£ Boiling Point (π¨ Rapid vapour release)
What it is:
The temperature at which the liquid changes into vapour throughout the liquid mass, not just at the surface.
Key behavior:
Heavy vapour cloud formation
Rapid increase in fire/explosion risk if ignition exists
HSE meaning:
π Vapour accumulation can exceed LELβUEL range
π High explosion risk in confined spaces
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4οΈβ£ Auto-Ignition Temperature (π₯π₯π₯ Self-ignition)
What it is:
The temperature at which the vapour ignites automatically without any spark or flame.
Key behavior:
No ignition source required
Spontaneous combustion occurs
HSE meaning:
π Extremely dangerous condition
π Hot surfaces alone can cause fire
π Critical for engine rooms, hot equipment, furnaces
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π Simple Comparison (Easy to Remember)
π― Key HSE Takeaway
Flash point β controls storage & hot work permits
Fire point β determines fire severity
Boiling point β affects vapour explosion risk
Auto-ignition β critical for hot surfaces & equipment design.
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