RI 3132 Experiments to Determine the Minimum Amount of Coal Dust Required for Propogation of a Mine Explosion

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
4
File Size:
253 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 1931

Abstract

"Experience and experiment have goth shown that a cloud of coal-dust in air can be inflamed and an explosion developed only when a certain minimum concentration of the dust in air has been equaled or exceeded. Those who have had experience in the handling of coal know that dust is frequently present in the air and may be of sufficient density to obscure an ordinary electric light at a distance of 40 or 50 feet; yet flames may be, and times without number have been, introduced into such clouds, when no additional coal-dust has been stirred up, with no effect other than the burning of the dust particles which actually enter flame. Evidently the density of the dust cloud is insufficient to give self-supporting combustion.The minimum amount of dust in air required to give a spreading flame will vary with a number of factors such as the composition of the dust and its size. This amount in a unit space may be considered analogous to the lower limit of inflammability of fire damp (methane) in air, although the variation in limit of explosibility of gas is small even when conditions of the experiment are altered. In large-scale determinations of the lower limit of inflammability of coal-dust there is no certain method by which a sample of the dust cloud can be snatched and its density determined. It is necessary to produce the best possible dust cloud from a known weight of dust, in a known volume and assume - probably with considerable error - that the dust cloud is reasonably uniform. The dust cloud must be formed and the source of ignition applied to it simultaneously; this is generally accomplished by the use of blow-out shots of black blasting powder, dynamite, or similar explosive so prepared as to blow out like a cannon shot, or by a gas explosion. The more violence attending the source of ignition, the greater is the probability that all the dust is raised in a uniform cloud; and the greater the length or intensity of the flame, the greater are the chances of ignition. As a result one may obtain a variation in apparent minimum density with different sources of ignition. This difference is more apparent than real and must remain until devices for instantaneous sampling of dust clouds during explosions are perfected."
Citation

APA: G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald  (1931)  RI 3132 Experiments to Determine the Minimum Amount of Coal Dust Required for Propogation of a Mine Explosion

MLA: G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald RI 3132 Experiments to Determine the Minimum Amount of Coal Dust Required for Propogation of a Mine Explosion. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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