International Journal of Mining Science and Technology (Nov 2018)

Evaluation of the 20 L dust explosibility testing chamber and comparison to a modified 38 L vessel for underground coal

  • Robert Eades,
  • Kyle Perry,
  • Catherine Johnson,
  • Jacob Miller

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 6
pp. 885 – 890

Abstract

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The phenomenon of combustible dust explosions is present within many industries. Tests for explosibility of dust clouds per ASTM E1226 use a 20 L explosive chamber that places the combustible dust directly below the dispersion nozzle which generates a thorough mixture for testing purposes. However, in the underground coal mining industry, there are a number of geologic, mining, and regulatory factors that change the deposition scheme of combustible coal dust. This causes the atmosphere of a coal mine to have a variable rock dust-coal dust mixture at the time of ignition. To investigate the impact of this variable atmosphere, a series of lean explosibility tests were conducted on a sample of Pittsburgh Pulverized coal dust. These explosibility tests were conducted in a 38 L chamber with a 5 kJ Sobbe igniter. The 38 L chamber generates a variable air-dust mixture prior to ignition. The test results indicate that the 38 L chamber experiences reduced explosive pressures, and lower explosibility index values when compared to the 20 L chamber. Keywords: Dust explosion, Coal mining, Coal dust, Explosibility testing