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Research Article

Study on Diffusion Behavior of Inorganic Materials and Performance of Extinguishing Coal Fire

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Received 23 Apr 2022, Accepted 19 Oct 2022, Published online: 25 Oct 2022
 

ABSTRACT

The majority of a coal mine’s goaf is semi-closed complex porous medium space, which is a critical place for coal spontaneous combustion disasters. To investigate the flow diffusion pattern of inorganic compounds in fractured coal in the goaf, as well as the capacity to put out coal fires. It examine the viscosity properties of an inorganic material slurry as a function of water/material ratio and time. By building a three-dimensional grouting test platform in the lab, simulating the broken coal body with sand and gravel, designing orthogonal tests to run multiple groups of grouting tests, and analyzing the effects of factors besides grouting pressure, water/material ratio, and air space ratio on the slurry diffusion radius. The effect of grouting pressure on the pattern of slurry diffusion radius of inorganic material and the water/material ratio under the action of grouting pressure is studied. The test of inorganic materials to extinguish coal pile fire is done, and the fire extinguishing and cooling ability is assessed in comparison to mud of the same grade, based on a prior research of inorganic materials to suppress CO formation in coal oxidation warming. According on the findings, the three-dimensional grouting test platform can pass the grouting test of loose sand and gravel bodies at various grouting pressures. The effects of grouting pressure, water/material ratio, and air space ratio on slurry dispersion are discovered to be multivariate power function relationships rather than linear correlations. The related slurry diffusion radius equation is established, and the variables impacting the parameters of the slurry diffusion range are evaluated, with the grouting pressure and water/material ratio having a substantial impact on slurry diffusion. Inorganic materials, as opposed to mud, require less time to extinguish coal pile fires and are less prone to scatter. It can form an oxygen barrier through continually covering the surface of coal. The study’s findings might give a solid foundation for the avoidance of slurry and fire suppression of inorganic materials in the goaf.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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