The Food Industry is not safe from the risk of combustible dust. In fact, according to Food Engineering, some food ingredients create more combustible dust than coal. Not only do food production facilities need to maintain robust housekeeping for hygienic purposes, but also because fugitive dust poses a massive risk to the safety of the facility itself. In fact, Dust Safety Science found that in 2021, 49.5% of all combustible dust events were in the Food and Agriculture industries.
Before you determine how at-risk you are, you should be aware if there is a risk. So, how do you know if you have combustible dust? Well, there’s a good chance you already know – or OSHA does!
If you want to know for sure, you should conduct a Dust Hazard Analysis (DHA). OSHA requires a DHA per the NFPA 652 Standard on Combustible Dust. A DHA is the first step in understanding the risks you’re facing and the actions you should take. During the process, you’ll need to evaluate the dust in your facility as well as your processes. As a result, you’ll have a detailed report of any potential risks and the steps necessary to mitigate any identified risks.
Here are some of the most common food ingredients that contain combustible dust:
Grain dust includes wheat, barley, cornmeal (and dried corn), flour, oats, and more. Including dried corn, grain is the most produced crop in the United States, meaning there is a significant amount of facilities that produce grain dust in the U.S. and around the world. . Grain dust can be very small, therefore, a huge amount of surface area is exposed to oxygen, making it incredibly combustible. According to Setting Safety Standards, grain dust poses the most significant safety risk in grain production.
“Of all the hazards associated with grain handling, the most serious one is also the most difficult for those outside the grain business to understand. It is grain dust. This dust, generated whenever grain is handled, is easier to ignite and results in a more severe explosion than equal quantities of TNT.”
When you consider sugar dust, powdered sugar offers an excellent visual. It’s light and travels well – too well if you’ve ever tried adding it quickly to a recipe. The dust migrates, seemingly of its own accord, and is incredibly difficult to control. Dust build up in sugar processing is inevitable without a robust dust management plan.
Standard table sugar isn’t explosive; it will only catch fire at 662 degrees Fahrenheit – a temperature not likely to occur under normal operating conditions in a factory and is generally low risk. But the dust made from sugar – and yes, powdered sugar, as well – has a similar surface area to some grains. This means that sugar manufacturing facilities are at equal risk of a combustible dust event as grain.
These two aren’t the only ingredients that pose a combustible dust hazard. Alfalfa, herbs, hops, and even beet pulp produce combustible dust. If your product is ground down into light, fine particles, its dust will likely be carried through the air. If it’s a dry material or dries during production, you should be especially attuned to any build up.
Again, to be 100% sure, you should have a DHA conducted at your facility, but chances are you’ll be able to determine if you have a dust build up problem just by looking around your facility.
As the T.V. show, Mythbusters discovered in 2008, you may be surprised by the foods that can be flammable or combustible. As it turns out, when you combine powdered coffee creamer with just the right amount of air and a heat source, the combustion event that occurs is astonishing. In the full video, you’ll see a mushroom cloud explosion (as seen in the .gif) that sent the whole build team running.
As they say, those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it. You may be thinking, “How dangerous is dust, really?” Failing to manage combustible dust in your facility properly can be deadly.
Perhaps the most notable case of a combustible dust disaster in recent U.S. history occurred on February 7, 2008, at the Imperial Sugar refinery in Wentworth, Georgia. 14 people were killed, and 38 were injured – including 14 with life-altering injuries.
According to the review conducted in the aftermath of the explosion, “The explosion was fueled by massive accumulations of combustible sugar dust throughout the packaging building.” Clumps of sugar would occasionally block the conveyor belt and spill sugar onto the floor. On the day the event occurred, those clumps of sugar blocked the conveyor belt, dispersing the sugar into a confined area and the sugar’s dust into the air. The dust then came into contact with an overheated bearing surface, which acted as a source of ignition, resulting in the devastating explosion.
On October 29, 2011, a grain dust explosion at the Bartlett Grain Co in Atchison, KS, killed six employees and hospitalized two others.
OSHA’s report stated, “Bartlett Grain Co. L.P. faces five willful and eight serious safety violations cited by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The willful violations include allowing grain dust – which is nine times as explosive as coal dust – to accumulate, using compressed air to remove dust without first shutting down ignition sources, jogging (repeatedly starting and stopping) inside bucket elevators to free legs choked by grain, using electrical equipment inappropriate for the working environment and failing to require employees to use fall protection when working from heights.” The incident at Bartlett Grain illustrated the importance of not just managing dust but controlling it properly.
Though not in the United States, a more recent combustible dust event on May 28, 2019, in Kharauri village, Punjab, India. This incident happened at a grain feed factory, and even though it was the boiler that exploded first, according to Dust Safety Science, a secondary explosion was caused by dust accumulation. The plant supervisor was killed, and nine more people were injured.
(If you’re interested in hearing more from Chris Clooney, who founded and operates Dust Safety Science, check out our webinar with him here.)
One of the best ways to eliminate the risk of a combustible dust event is to prevent the accumulation from ever happening. Of course, you won’t be changing how you produce the foods or ingredients you handle – so you’ll need something that prevents it from accumulating.
SonicAire Fans do just that.
With a SonicAire fan system in place, your facility will no longer struggle with dust accumulation. We are so confident in that assertion that we offer a 100% compliance guarantee with our design and installation. That guarantee should ease your mind during OSHA inspections. But more than that, it will provide peace of mind and a new level of safety for your employees and your plant.
After all, with proper dust management, the tragedies mentioned above could have been completely avoided or greatly minimized with better dust management.
Due to thermal currents (in broader terms, the concept that “heat rises”), dust will naturally travel up into overhead spaces. Our fans create an air barrier that we have named BarrierAire, that prevents dust from rising into the hard-to-reach places in your facility. SonicAire Dust Control Fans oscillate and rotate to create an air barrier that forces dust back to the ground, where it’s easily swept up as part of your facility’s regular clean-up.
Our proven process is simple. SonicAire’s engineers evaluate your facility and design a custom system just for you. They’ll account for every unique corner and piece of equipment in your facility, making your SonicAire system a perfect fit for the ingredients you handle and how you do it.
According to “The State of Conveying” report, “The overwhelming challenge in conveying materials is cleaning and maintenance for 54% of food processing professionals, while a connected challenge of downtime is second at 33%.” Those percentages tell us that maintaining a clean facility isn’t just about the safety and risks of combustible dust (though that’s a vital concern) but also about lost production dollars.
Right now, downtime for your facility due to cleaning may be critical to your plant’s safety and profitability – but it doesn’t need to be.
Want to learn how SonicAire dust control fans can help your food production facility maintain a safer, healthier, and more efficient work environment? Click here for a Complimentary Dust Management Plan and ROI Analysis, you can also contact us with your questions or for more information about our products.