Dust Explosion: Difference between revisions

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*Reducing oxygen (either by reducing the levels in the work area/room to lower levels, or via working under an inert atmosphere (may not need argon etc, notrogen should work assuming the process allows for it)
*Reducing oxygen (either by reducing the levels in the work area/room to lower levels, or via working under an inert atmosphere (may not need argon etc, notrogen should work assuming the process allows for it)


=See Also=
=Internal Links=
*[[Charcoal Powder]]
*[[Charcoal Powder]]
*[[Sawdust]]
*[[Sawdust]]


=Useful Links=
=External Links=
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_explosion The Wikipedia Page on Dust Explosions]
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_explosion The Wikipedia Page on Dust Explosions]
[[Category: Pollution]] [[Category: Safety]]

Latest revision as of 20:33, 10 December 2020

Basics

  • An explosion causing a typically stable, yet combustable fuel to have more surface area (due to forming a dust cloud) and thus ignight and Deflagrate, and often Detonate
  • Can lead to MAJOR industrial accidents SUCH AS
  • Main industries at risk are sugar mills, flour mills, metal powder production, saw mills, and essentially anything dealing with powder, or processes that can produce it
  • The ignition source can be somthing as small as static electricity, or machine heat
  • This is also the operating principle behind educational labs, entertainment devices , and thermobaric explosives

Avoidance Strategies

Dust Reduction

Design Considerations

  • Close at risk areas off/modularise them
  • Reducing oxygen (either by reducing the levels in the work area/room to lower levels, or via working under an inert atmosphere (may not need argon etc, notrogen should work assuming the process allows for it)

Internal Links

External Links