4.6 Article

Ignition of Deposited Wood Dust Layer by Selected Sources

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app10175779

Keywords

wood dust; minimum ignition temperature; hot plate; electric coil; smouldering cigarette

Funding

  1. Cultural and Educational Grant Agency of the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak Republic [KEGA 0014UKF-4/2020]

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The main waste of wood sanding technology is wood dust. The formation of wood dust affects its behaviour. Wood dust can be in a turbulent form and behaves explosively or in a settled form where it becomes flammable. Dust particles are barely detectable by the naked eye, wood dust still presents substantial health, safety, fire and explosion risks to employees. This article deals with the evaluation of ignition temperature and surface temperature of deposited wood dust samples by selected ignition sources. The influence of selected physical properties of wood dust, the size of the contact area between the ignition source and the combustible material, the spatial arrangement during the ignition and the application time of the ignition source are analysed. The paper describes the behaviour of a 15 mm deposited layer of wood dust of spruce (Picea abiesL.), beech (Fagus silvaticaL.). oak (Quercus petraeaLiebl.) caused by three potential ignition sources-a hot surface, an electric coil and a smouldering cigarette. Prior to the experimental determination of the ignition temperature, dust moisture content which did not significantly affect the ignition phase of the samples, as well as sieve analysis of tested samples were determined. The lowest minimum ignition temperature on the hot plate, as an important property of any fuel, because the combustion reaction of the fuel becomes self-sustaining only above this temperature, was reached by the oak dust sample (280 degrees C), the highest by the spruce dust sample (300 degrees C). The ignition process of wood dust was comparable in all samples, differing in the ignition time and the area of the thermally degraded layer. The least effective ignition source was a smouldering cigarette.

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