The financial and reputational damage that can be caused by industrial accidents has seen rapid change in both regulations and attitudes to safety in recent years.
Anyone working in the bulk handling of dry products knows that processing any powders is relatively high-risk and therefore complying with safe powder handling practices is important.
And whilst we all want to do the best for our staff, regulatory health and safety compliance often comes at a significant cost to your business. So how can manufacturers who process powders reduce both risk to their staff and their ongoing compliance costs?
Powder processing is a high-risk operation, mainly due to the potential for electrostatic build-up and the possibility of secondary explosions. These can occur when there is an explosion in your plant or equipment, and any dust on surfaces outside of the machinery becomes airborne due to the shock of the primary blast. This dust cloud can then ignite, causing a more devastating, secondary explosion.
That means it’s vital to ensure that any flexible connections between your equipment are strong, durable and will contain your product 100% so dust can’t escape your process in the first place.
This will not only reduce your explosion risk, but it will also help lower your ongoing cleaning costs and any potential unplanned downtime for spills and leaks due to torn or ill-fitting connectors.
The next most important priority for reducing secondary explosion risk is eliminating possible sources of ignition. Regular preventative maintenance programmes should be undertaken to keep all machinery adequately monitored and cleaned to help prevent any potential for sparking during operation.
Non-metallic transitions between machinery, such as flexible connections, where product flow occurs, also present an ignition risk due to static electricity, which can build up and lead to spark discharges.
If a spark does occur for any reason, it’s important to contain any initial explosion within the machinery itself to ensure you reduce the risk of secondary explosions and injury to staff. The weakest point for the potential escape of these explosive flames and gases is often at the transitions between machinery.
Traditional hose-clamped flexible connectors tend to give way quickly, allowing the explosion to propagate, potentially leading to a deadly secondary explosion.
Choosing a strong, dust-proof and explosion-resistant connector like the BFM® fitting is fundamental to both preventing and containing any explosions that might occur within a process line.
However, even with explosion-resistant, dust-proof connectors made from static dissipative materials, international safety regulations such as ATEX and IECEx may also require that any electrical equipment within a certain radius of a flexible connection be ‘rated’ to comply with the regulations’ standards.
Within the ATEX framework, for example, factory areas are classified into explosion risk ‘zones’ and these must be protected from any possible sources of ignition. This means that all equipment and protective systems intended for use in these zone areas must also be ATEX compliant.
This is in case there is a failure of a process equipment component, like the flexible connector, and dust escapes into the immediate environment. That event could potentially set the scene for a combustible dust explosion if a spark were created by the electrical equipment in that zone.
The issue with this explosion zoning from a compliance-cost perspective is that ATEX-rated equipment can be substantially more expensive than standard versions, simply because of the nature of the additional casing and sealing required to achieve the certification.
This effectively means the ATEX safety risk zone is now limited to the space between the two connectors, thereby reducing the ATEX zoning risk for the entire outer factory environment.
This simple solution has saved these customers thousands in electrical equipment costs as they weren’t required to install the higher-specification (and higher-priced) ATEX-rated equipment.
BFM®’s Seeflex range of connectors is already approved for use in ATEX explosion zones, and this additional option is an excellent way to maximise the benefits of your investment in a BFM® fitting system.
Contact us now to find out more about how the BFM® fitting system helps make your plant safer.