1. U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, Investigation Report, Aluminum Dust Explosion Hayes Lemmerz International, Inc., Huntington, Indiana, Report No. 2004-01-I-IN, September 2005.
2. Flammability limits of dust - minimum inerting concentrations;Dastidar;Proc. Saf. Progr.,1999
3. U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, Investigation Report, Dust Explosion, West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc., Kinston, North Carolina, Report No. 2003-07-I-NC, September 2004.
4. National Fire Protection Association, NFPA 499 Recommended Practice for the Classification of Combustible Dusts and of Hazardous (Classified) Locations for Electrical Installations in Chemical Process Areas, 2004 ed., Sections 5.7.2.5.2, 3.3.6, A-3.3.6, 3.3.9, A-3.3.9.
5. National Materials Advisory Board, Classification of Dusts in Accordance with the National Electrical Code, Report of the Panel on Classification of Combustible Dusts of the Committee on Evaluation of Industrial Hazards, Publication NMAB 353-3, 1980.