A flame arrester (also spelled arrestor), deflagration arrester[1], or flame trap[2] is a device that stops fuel combustion by extinguishing the flame.[3].
Contents |
Flame arresters are used:
They are commonly used on:
A flame arrester functions by forcing a flame front through channels too narrow to permit the continuance of a flame[2]. These passages can be regular, like wire mesh or a sheet metal plate with punched holes, or irregular, such as those in random packing[1].
The required size of the channels needed to stop the flame front can vary significantly, depending on the flammability of the fuel mixture. The large openings on a chain link fence are capable of stopping the spread of a small, slow-burning grass fire, but fast-burning grass fires will penetrate the fence unless the holes are very small[4]. In a coal mine containing highly explosive coal dust or methane, the wire mesh of a Davy lamp must be very tightly spaced.
For flame arresters used as a safety device, the mesh must be protected from damage due being dropped or struck by another object, and the mesh must be capable of rigidly retaining its shape during a forceful explosive event. Any shifting of the individual wires that make up the mesh can create an opening large enough to allow the flame to penetrate and spread beyond the barrier.
On a fuel storage vent, flame arresters also serve a secondary purpose of allowing air pressure to equalize inside the tank when fuel is added or removed, while also preventing insects from flying or crawling into the vent piping and fouling the fuel in the tanks and pipes.
Flame arresters should be used only in the conditions they have been designed and tested for. Since the depth on an arrester is specified for certain conditions, changes in the temperature, pressure, or composition of the gases entering the arrester can cause the flame spatial velocity to increase, making the depth of the arrester insufficient to stop the flame front. The deflagration may continue downstream of the arrester[1].
Flame arresters should be periodically inspected to make sure they are free of dirt, insects using it as a nest, or corrosion. The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board concluded that an uninspected and badly corroded flame arrester failed to prevent a 2006 explosion at a wastewater treatment plant in Daytona Beach, Florida[5].