A number of years ago the importance of dust collectors in our
plants pertaining toward safety was simply an afterthought. But, after several
dust explosions resulting in scores of fatalities the importance of dust
collectors in protecting our workers is rising. On occasion dust collectors
catch fire. That is why the Aluminum Plant Safety Blog repeatedly mentions the
need for dust collectors to be placed outside buildings. In addition dust
collectors need to be fenced off to prevent workers from congregating around
them during breaks or lunch time. Here is a recent story of a dust collector
fire.
Morristown
firefighters used a dry chemical to extinguish a ferocious, white-hot fire that
was fueled by a large quantity of aluminum dust outside the Kawasaki Tennessee
plant Monday, April 24, 2017 in the afternoon, a firefighter said. The fire,
which burned with the intensity of a sparkler, temporarily halted production at
the automotive supplier in the Morristown Airport Industrial District, but work
resumed this morning, according to the Deputy Chief. No firefighter was injured
battling the potentially dangerous blaze. The fire started at a large clogged
funnel outside the plant that’s an end point of the ventilation and filtration
system. Firefighters used a pike to loosen the super-heated metal dust, which
ignited as soon as it was exposed to oxygen, according to the Deputy Chief. “We
had to dig (the aluminum dust) out of the bottom,” the deputy fire chief said.
“Our crew did a really good job. The (dust) would fall out in globs. They had
to poke it and run.”
The Deputy
Chief says the metal would have easily burned through firefighters’ turnout
gear. The fire was so intense that most of the aluminum dust burned before it
splashed onto the ground. Taylor says the near-molten metal burned a hole
approximately 4 feet in diameter in the ground. Taylor says firefighters were
rotated in and out of the hot zone. While one crew was engaged, another crew
stood by in case a firefighter required rescue, according to the Deputy Chief.
The Kawasaki plant, has approximately three other fan systems that remove
aluminum dust from the production area, according to the Deputy Chief.
The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog is glad no one was injured in this
fire. Sadly we have seen too many fire fighters injured or killed when fighting
aluminium dust fires. Their deaths are a result of a lack of knowledge or
awareness of the hazards associated with fighting dust fires. We are so very
happy that the fire department in this incident was prepared and was able to
successfully extinguish the fire.
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