gregsippel
Materials
- Jan 1, 2003
- 4
I am building a fume incinerator which destructs flammable gases which will be generated inside a muffle during a continuous process. The muffle is just a pipe that is heated externally by electric heaters. Our product (a powder) is pushed thru the pipe, and it is heated in a nitrogen atmosphere. The powder offgases hydrogen, ammonia, carbon monoxide, all of which are flammable. These gases are sent to a fume incinerator, which is fired by a natural gas burner. If the burner shuts off accidentally, my process gases will continue to be generated for many hours thereafter (thermal momentum). There is no way to stop them. These gases are still being sent to the fume incinerator even though its burner has shut down. When the burner is reignited, we would have to begin a purge, which introduces air, which I assume would cause an explosion inside the fume incinerator since it is filled with process fumes that are at approximately 1200F to 1400F (above auto ignition temp). How do I prevent an explosion when the burner is relit? Should I purge the entire furnace with large volumes of nitrogen gas anytime we lose the burner? I'm not sure this will help.