2022 Spring Meeting and 18th Global Congress on Process Safety Proceedings
(52bd) PYROPHORIC METAL DUSTS: SECONDARY EXPLOSION HAZARDS
Author
Sub-micron metal particles can be produced by several types of mechanical operations, such as grinding, milling, crushing, pulverizing, and machining, and also by screening, if the processes are not well contained. The escape of sub-micron particles can result in âloftingâ of the particles and deposition on elevated surfaces. Similar lofting behavior can result from the use of compressed air to clean equipment and other nearer-floor surfaces. Physical shock of a structure or a primary explosion can result in the dislodging of such dust accumulations, and ignition of the descending dust can result in a devasting secondary explosion. The presence of sub-micron dusts in equipment can create a primary-explosion hazard because of the extremely-low minimum ignition energy of such dusts and the high probability of a dense cloud within equipment as a result of the very low settling velocities.
This paper compiles the available data for metal dusts that are capable of pyrophoric behavior, including the effects of mechanical-processing temperatures on the hazardous particle sizes. Also shown are an extensive bibliography and graphs that show (1) hazardous particle-size distributions and (2) a method for evaluating the explosion hazards of metal [and organic] dusts, to aid in determining the types of systems, devices, and procedures that are needed for explosion prevention.