With grainstoring being a potentially explosive environment I had a look at getting information regarding intrinsic safety and grain stores,to see if intrinsic safety or flameproof apparatus was required for these places
There may be regulations that we are unaware of regarding these environments,if like me you have no experience of them
So I would be careful (as you are being) to find out what may or may not be unique to these installs before hand
The European Union's new regulations focus global attention on safety in potentially explosive environments.
Maintaining and troubleshooting equipment can be a difficult challenge in a normal manufacturing environment. Doing so in a potentially explosive environment is even more so. While many guidelines have been published to define safety processes in hazardous environments,
the European Union's ATEX regulations, which became mandatory on July 1, are the first compulsory intrinsic safety rules. Intrinsic safety is a protection standard employed in potentially explosive atmospheres. Devices that are certified as "intrinsically safe" are designed to be unable to release sufficient energy, by either thermal or electrical means, to cause ignition of flammable material such as gases, dust and particulates.
Intrinsically safe standards apply to all equipment that can create one or more of a range of defined potential explosion sources:
- Electrical sparks.
- Electrical arcs.
- Flames.
- Hot surfaces.
- Static electricity.
- Electromagnetic radiation.
- Chemical reactions.
- Mechanical impact.
- Mechanical friction.
- Compression ignition.
- Acoustic energy.
- Ionizing radiation.
Intrinsic safety is particularly important for technicians working in industries such as petrochemical, pharmaceutical and pulp/paper, or around bulk
materials such as grain, mining or any environment where explosive gases are present.
The importance of safety in these environments cannot be stressed enough. It takes a very small amount of energy to cause an ignition -- for example, a mixture of hydrogen in air requires only 20 microJ of energy. The proper practices and tools will minimize the inherent risk involved in working around these hazards.