If you handle dry powders in bulk — flour, starch, resin powder, feed ingredients, or mineral powders — you've probably heard about dust explosions. What's less talked about, but just as dangerous, is propagating brush discharge (PBD). Unlike a simple spark, PBD can travel across a non-conductive fabric surface and ignite fine dust clouds with surprisingly low energy.
The question is: does your current bulk bag protect against it?
What Exactly Is Propagating Brush Discharge?
Propagating brush discharge occurs when electrostatic charge accumulates on the inner surface of an insulating material — in this case, the woven polypropylene fabric of a bulk bag. When the charge density exceeds the fabric's dielectric strength, a sudden, high-energy discharge rips across the surface.
Here's the critical number:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|
| Typical discharge energy of PBD | 100 mJ – 1,000 mJ+ |
| Minimum Ignition Energy (MIE) of many organic dusts | 3 mJ – 30 mJ |
| Standard Type B FIBC breakdown voltage requirement | ≤ 4–6 kV |
A single propagating brush discharge can deliver 100 to 1,000 times the energy needed to ignite a dust cloud. That's not a static shock — that's an ignition source.
Why Standard Bulk Bags Are a Problem
Standard FIBCs (non-conductive, untreated woven PP) have high breakdown voltage and insulating properties. When fine powder slides against the fabric during filling or discharge, triboelectric charging builds up continuously. With no path to ground and no static-dissipative mechanism, the inner wall becomes a capacitor waiting to fail.
This is especially dangerous in industries handling powders below 30 mJ MIE — a category that includes many food ingredients, pharmaceutical intermediates, and fine chemical powders.
The Type B Solution: Simple but Not Lazy
A Type B Breathable FIBC Bag is designed with one job: prevent propagating brush discharge without requiring a grounding wire.
Here's how it works:
- Anti-static masterbatch is blended into the PP melt during extrusion, lowering the fabric's surface resistivity
- Under normal ambient humidity, the bag surface adsorbs trace moisture, forming a thin conductive film
- This film allows electrostatic charge to leak across the surface gradually, rather than accumulating to dangerous levels
The result is a bag that inherently suppresses PBD while keeping the manufacturing process simple — and therefore cost-effective.
Where Type B Bags Are the Right Call
Type B FIBCs are not a one-size-fits-all solution. They are strictly suitable for specific conditions:
| Condition | Acceptable for Type B? |
|---|
| Dust MIE ≥ 3 mJ | ✅ Yes |
| No flammable gases, vapors, or solvents present | ✅ Yes |
| Dust Zones 21 or 22 (dust layers or clouds present) | ✅ Yes |
| Dust MIE < 3 mJ | ❌ No |
| Flammable gas or solvent vapors in environment | ❌ No (use Type C or D) |
Real-World Applications
The industries that benefit most from Type B Breathable FIBC Bags are those handling moderately combustible dry powders:
- Food raw materials — Flour, sugar, starch, food additives. Static buildup causes both ignition risk and product contamination via electrostatic particle attraction.
- Plastics & chemicals — Resin powder, plastic pellets, masterbatch. The fine, dry nature of these materials generates significant triboelectric charge during pneumatic filling.
- Building materials — Putty powder, talcum powder, mineral powders with MIE > 3 mJ. These are often cost-sensitive, making Type B the most economical compliance path.
- Feed & fertilizer — Feed meal, organic fertilizer, compound fertilizer. Typically low-hazard dust with moderate MIE values.
- Pharmaceutical intermediates — Type B Anti-Static Bulk Bags that require clean, safe bulk handling without grounding complexity.
The Cost Advantage You Can't Ignore
Let's compare the three common anti-static FIBC types on cost and complexity. For Type B FIBC Dust Explosion Prevention, Type B is often the most practical choice:
| FIBC Type | Grounding Required? | Relative Cost | Best For |
|---|
| Type B | No | Low | Low-risk dry dust (MIE ≥ 3 mJ) |
| Type C (Conductive) | Yes | Medium-High | Flammable dust & gases |
| Type D (Anti-Static) | No | High | All environments incl. gases |
Type B bags eliminate the need for grounding infrastructure — no grounding cables, no conductive threads, no grounding verification procedures. For facilities handling hundreds or thousands of bags per day, that translates into tangible savings in equipment cost, operator training, and handling time.
One Warning Label You Can't Skip
Every Type B FIBC comes with a mandatory warning label: "For use in Dust Zones 21–22 and where dust MIE ≥ 3 mJ."
This is not optional. Using a Type B bag in an environment with finer dust (MIE below 3 mJ) or flammable vapors puts your facility at direct risk. If your powder generates a dust cloud that can be ignited by a few millijoules, you need a Type C or D bag.
The same principle applies to humidity. Because Type B relies on surface moisture for charge dissipation, performance degrades in very dry climates (below 30% RH). If your facility operates in arid or cold conditions where indoor humidity stays low year-round, verify your bag's performance curve before relying on Type B as your primary protection.
If you're using standard bulk bags for dry powder today, take 10 minutes to check your dust's Minimum Ignition Energy. That single number will tell you whether Type B is the right move — or whether you need to go further.