Journal of Loss Prevention in The Process Industries, Vol.36, 246-253, 2015
Suppression of metal dust deflagrations
Dust explosions continue to pose a serious threat to the process industries handling combustible powders. According to a review carried out by the Chemical Safety Board (CSB) in 2006, 281 dust explosions were reported between 1980 and 2005 in the USA, killing 119 workers and injuring 718. Metal dusts were involved in 20% of these incidents. Metal dust deflagrations have also been regularly reported in Europe, China and Japan. The term "metal dusts" encompasses a large family of materials with diverse ignitability and explosibility properties. Compared to organic fuels, metal dusts such as aluminum or magnesium exhibit higher flame temperature (T-f), maximum explosion pressure (P-max), deflagration index (K-St), and flame speed (S-f), maldng mitigation more challenging. However, technological advances have increased the efficiency of active explosion protection systems drastically, so the mitigation of metal dust deflagrations has now become possible. This paper provides an overview of metal dust deflagration suppression tests. Recent experiments performed in a 4.4 m(3) vessel have shown that aluminum dust deflagrations can be effectively suppressed at a large scale. It further demonstrates that metal dust deflagrations can be managed safely if the hazard is well understood. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.