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The '''minimum ignition energy''' ('''MIE''') is a safety characteristic in [[Explosion protection|explosion protection and prevention]] which determines the ignition capability of fuel-air mixtures, where the fuel may be combustible vapor, gas or dust. It is defined as the minimum electrical energy stored in a capacitor, which, when discharged, is sufficient to ignite the most ignitable mixture of fuel and air under specified test conditions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://staubex.ifa.dguv.de/HTML-Dokumente/ERLT8E.HTM|title=Minimum ignition energy MIE or E_min|access-date=2021-08-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190902120011/https://staubex.ifa.dguv.de/HTML-Dokumente/ERLT8E.HTM|archive-date=2019-09-02}}</ref> The MIE is one of the assessment criteria for the effectiveness of ignition, e.g. the discharge of electrostatic energy, mechanical ignition sources or electromagnetic radiation. It is an important parameter for the design of the protective measure of "avoidance of effective ignition sources".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://downloadcenter.bgrci.de/resource/downloadcenter/downloads/R003_Gesamtdokument.pdf|title=Sicherheitstechnische Kenngrößen Ermitteln und bewerten|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210815123308/https://downloadcenter.bgrci.de/resource/downloadcenter/downloads/R003_Gesamtdokument.pdf|publisher=Berufsgenossesnschaft Rohstoffe und chemische Energie|archive-date=2021-08-15}}</ref>
'''Minimum ignition energy (MIE)''' is the minimum amount of energy required to ignite a combustible vapor, gas or dust cloud, for example due to an [[electrostatic discharge]]. Ignition of a fuel air mixture is possible only when the rate of liberation of heat near the ingnition zone is greater than or equal to the heat loss by conduction, thus ignition energy balances the heat loss by conduction. this is known as Minimum Ignition Energy. Heat loss due to radiation is not considered and the ignition process is assumed to be staedy and one-dimensional. MIE is measured in [[joules]] (J). <ref> Pratt, Thomas H. "Electrostatic Ignitions of Fires and Explosions" Wiley-AIChE (July 15, 1997) Center for Chemical Process Safety </ref>

[[Explosive]]s, [[hydrogen]], [[unsaturated hydrocarbon]]s and [[alkane]]s in oxygen have the lowest MIE – range of {{e|-3}} to {{e|-1}} (mJ). Alkanes in air, distillate fuels, hybrid mixtures and extremely sensitive dusts have a MIE range of {{e|-1}} to {{e|1}} (mJ). Combustible dusts have a MIE range of {{e|1}} to {{e|4}} (mJ).

For most materials, the lowest ignition energy value occurs at a concentration near the midpoint between those for the [[lower flammable limit]] (LFL) and the [[upper flammable limit]] (UFL). <ref> [[National Fire Protection Association|NFPA]] 77 – 2007; page 20 </ref>

== See also ==
* [[Hydrogen safety]]
* [[Dust explosion]]
* [[Spark plug]]


==References==
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Latest revision as of 17:44, 26 December 2023

The minimum ignition energy (MIE) is a safety characteristic in explosion protection and prevention which determines the ignition capability of fuel-air mixtures, where the fuel may be combustible vapor, gas or dust. It is defined as the minimum electrical energy stored in a capacitor, which, when discharged, is sufficient to ignite the most ignitable mixture of fuel and air under specified test conditions.[1] The MIE is one of the assessment criteria for the effectiveness of ignition, e.g. the discharge of electrostatic energy, mechanical ignition sources or electromagnetic radiation. It is an important parameter for the design of the protective measure of "avoidance of effective ignition sources".[2]

References

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  1. ^ "Minimum ignition energy MIE or E_min". Archived from the original on 2019-09-02. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
  2. ^ "Sicherheitstechnische Kenngrößen Ermitteln und bewerten" (PDF). Berufsgenossesnschaft Rohstoffe und chemische Energie. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-08-15.