Dust Explosion Information
Characteristics of Dust Explosions
When a mass of solid flammable material is heated it burns away slowly owing to the limited surface area exposed to the oxygen of
the air. The energy produced is liberated gradually and harmlessly because it is dissipated as quickly as it is released. The result is
quite different if the same mass of material is ground to a fine powder and intimately mixed with air in the form of a dust cloud. In
these conditions the surface area exposed to the air is very great and if ignition now occurs the whole of the material will burn with
great rapidity; the energy, which in the case of the mass was liberated gradually and harmlessly, is now released suddenly with the
evolution of large quantities of heat and, as a rule, gaseous reaction products.
Explosive Concentrations
Although an intimate mixture of a flammable dust and air may burn with explosive violence, not all mixtures will do so. There is a
range of concentrations of the dust and air within which the mixture can explode, but mixtures above or below this range cannot. The
lowest concentration of dust capable of exploding is referred to as the lower explosive limit and the concentration above which an
explosion will not take place as the upper explosive limit.
The lower explosive limits of many materials have been measured. They vary from 10 grams per cubic metre to about 500 grams per
cubic metre. For most practical purposes it may be assumed that 30 grams per cubic metre is the lower explosive limit for most
flammable dusts. Though this may seem to be a very low concentration, in appearance a cloud of dust of such a concentration would
resemble a very dense fog. The upper explosive limits are not well defined and have poor repeatability under laboratory test
conditions. Since the upper explosive limit is of little practical importance, data for this parameter is rarely available.
The most violent explosions are produced when the proportion of oxygen present is not far removed from that which will result in
complete combustion. The range of the explosive concentrations of a dust cloud is not simply a function of the chemical composition
of the dust; the limits vary with the size and shape of the particles in the dust cloud.
Ignition of Dust Clouds
Although mixtures of dust and air within the flammable range are capable of explosion, they will not explode unless they are ignited in
some way. Once a source of ignition is presented to the flammable mixture, flame will propagate throughout the cloud. The mode of
ignition of a dust cloud is typically a hot surface, an electrical spark or a mechanically generated frictional spark - see ignition
sources. The minimum condition necessary to initiate a dust explosion with certain modes of ignition can be measured and some
results are listed below. Data is provided for comparison purposes only and must not be used for explosion protection design.
Note: Figures for explosion protection design should be taken from explosibility testing of indicative samples. See dust explosion
testing for details.
Effects of a Dust Explosion
The heat produced by the combustion of the dust particles in a dust explosion and any gases evolved will cause a rapid increase in
pressure at the walls of the vessel containing the dust cloud. In factories it is the effect of this pressure wave on relatively weak items
of plant and buildings which has caused the deaths and injuries to persons employed in handling materials giving rise to dust
explosions.
Further, since the pressure wave produced by the explosion can cause further dust which may have accumulated in the plant or on
internal surfaces of buildings to be thrown into suspension in air, additional fuel can be fed to the flame and a disastrous secondary
explosion may follow - see photo left.
Additional consequences following a dust explosion pressure wave are: the fires that may have been started by the dust flame; the
implosion effect on the plant and buildings as the pressure within these rapidly returns to normal; the compromise of emergency exit
routes and emergency lighting.
Conditions for
an Explosion
A dust cloud of any
flammable material will
explode where:
1
the concentration of
dust in air falls within the
explosive limits, and
2
a source of ignition
of the required energy for
that dust cloud is present.
Conversely, an explosion
can be prevented if one, or
preferably both, of these
conditions are avoided.