Inhibiting effect of inhibitors on ignition sensitivity of wood dust

Liju Zheng, Yuan Yu, Jie Yang, Qingwu Zhang, Juncheng Jiang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Wood products are easy to produce dust in the production and processing process, and have a serious explosion risk. In order to improve the safety of wood products production, the inhibiting effects of magnesium hydroxide (MTH), SiO2, melamine polyphosphate (MPP) on the minimum ignition energy (MIE) and minimum ignition temperature (MIT) of wood dust were experimentally studied. The results showed that the inhibiting effects of inhibitors on the MIE of wood dust show the order of MPP > SiO2>MTH. The order of the inhibiting effects on the MIT of wood dust was MPP > MTH > SiO2. When 10% MPP was added to wood dust, the time when the flame appears (Tappear) and the time when the flame reaches the top of the glass tube (Ttop) obviously rose to 80, 140 ms. Therefore, MPP had the best inhibiting effect on the ignition sensitivity of wood dust. According to thermogravimetry (TG), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) tests, the introduction of MPP leaded to lower maximum mass loss rate (MMLR), higher temperature corresponding to mass loss of 90% (T0.1), residual mass and heat absorption. In addition, thermogravimetric analysis/infrared spectrometry (TG-IR) results showed that MPP produced H2O (g) and NH3 (g) during the thermal decomposition process, which diluted the oxygen.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104391
JournalJournal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries
Volume70
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2021

Keywords

  • Ignition sensitivity
  • Inhibiting effect
  • Minimum ignition energy
  • Minimum ignition temperature
  • Wood dust

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