Site: Home > News and events
COMPREHENSIVE FLAMMABILITY TESTING
Whether you store, handle or process flammable/combustible materials, it is necessary to have all applicable data needed to assess risk at ambient, atmospheric and process conditions. The flammability properties of gas or vapour atmospheres are often affected by operating and processing conditions such as chemical properties, temperature, pressure, composition of the fuel gas or vapour mixture, concentration of inert gaseous components, concentration of gaseous oxidants, volume and material of construction of the test vessel.
Some of the tests process safety leaders can employ to evaluate risk and assure the safety of people and operations involving flammable gases or liquids include:
Vapour Pressure:
The pressure exhibited by vapour present above a liquid surface is known as vapour pressure. Vapour pressure is an indication of a liquid's evaporation rate. A substance with a high vapor pressure at normal temperatures is often referred to as volatile.
Limiting Oxygen Concentration (LOC):
This is the minimum concentration of oxidant capable of supporting combustion. This data can be used to study explosion prevention (elimination of flammable atmospheres by oxidant depletion or decreasing ignition sensitivity of the flammable atmosphere) or explosion severity reduction involving the use of inert gases.
Flash Point:
The flash point of a liquid is the lowest temperature at which sufficient vapor is evolved to form a flammable mixture in air at standard atmospheric pressure. The flash point provides a simple, convenient index for assessing the flammability of a wide variety of materials.
Auto-ignition Temperature:
This is the lowest temperature at which a material will spontaneously ignite in the absence of an external ignition source, such as a spark or flame. The auto-ignition temperature can be used to specify operating, storage, and handling procedures for materials.
Explosion Severity / (Maximum Explosion Pressure, Pmax and maximum rate of pressure rise, Kg) – Pmax and Kg are explosive properties measured in the laboratory to quantify the severity of a gas/vapor cloud explosion. The Pmax and Kg data can then be used to design explosion protection measures for process equipment and buildings.
Flammability Diagram:
Under various temperature and pressure conditions, liquids will evolve a certain quantity of vapors. For pure substances, the vapors evolved in air at atmospheric pressure may be flammable over a certain range of concentrations defined by the upper and lower flammability limits. If the oxygen concentration in air is reduced the range of flammability is generally reduced. The effect of oxygen concentration on flammability properties is best represented by plotting a three-component flammability diagram showing the effect of oxygen concentration and inert gas (N2) at atmospheric conditions on the flammability of the vapors or gases.
Minimum ignition energy (MIE) test:
Determines the lowest spark of energy capable of igniting a sample under test conditions. The test is used primarily to assess the potential vulnerability of vapors to electrostatic discharges, but is also relevant to frictional sparks.
Limits of flammability:
The UFL and LFL define the range of flammable concentrations for a substance in air at atmospheric pressure. They may be used to specify operating, storage, and materials handling procedures. They are particularly useful in specifying ventilation requirements for operations involving flammable liquids and gases. We determine limits of flammability in accordance with the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) Method E681-94.
Open burning test (liquids):
This test is performed in order to visually (qualitatively) characterize the behaviour and traits of a burning liquid.
Sustained combustibility test:
Used to determine, if a substance sustains combustion when heated under the test conditions and exposed to a flame. We perform the sustained combustibility test according to the “United Nations Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods”, second revised edition, 1995
Our accredited state-of-the-art flammability laboratories and large-scale test facility can provide testing according to the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), the United Nations Department of Transportation for all process conditions and scales.
2018-08-30 13:35
- Related News
Ozone Aging Test Chamber: Understanding Four Concentration Test Methods
How to properly maintain the horizontal and vertical combustion tester?
What you must know about the Xenon lamp aging test chamber filter
Application of Ventilation Aging Test Chamber on Polymer Materials
3 Tips for Purchasing Aging Test Chambers
Matters that must be avoided in the operation of the UV aging test chamber
How to use the UV aging test chamber lamp correctly?
Wire and cable test artifact - ozone aging test box
3 aging factors that must be simulated in the aging test box
The role of Burning Manikin System in the field of thermal protection