Coal fires are a serious threat to the workers' security and safe production in open pit mines. The coal fire source is hidden and innumerable, and the large-area cavity is prevalent in the coal seam after the coal burned, causing the conventional extinguishment technology difficult to work. Foams are considered as an efficient means of fire extinguishment in these large-scale workplaces. A noble foam preparation method is introduced, and an original design of cavitation jet device is proposed to add foaming agent stably. The jet cavitation occurs when the water flow rate and pressure ratio reach specified values. Through self-building foaming system, the high performance foams are produced and then infused into the blast drilling holes at a large flow. Without complicated operation, this system is found to be very suitable for extinguishing large-scale coal fires. Field application shows that foam generation adopting the proposed key technology makes a good fire extinguishment effect. The temperature reduction using foams is 6-7 times higher than water, and CO concentration is reduced from 9.43 to 0.092‰ in the drilling hole. The coal fires are controlled successfully in open pit mines, ensuring the normal production as well as the security of personnel and equipment.
As their service life increases, cement-based materials inevitably undergo microcracking and local damage. In response to this problem, this study used phacoemulsification-solvent volatilization to prepare a multifunctional sustained-release microcapsule (SFRM) with selfhealing and flame-retardant characteristics. The synthesis of SFRM is based on the modification of ethyl cellulose with nano-SiO 2 particles and crosslinking with a silane coupling agent to form an organic−inorganic hybrid wall material. The epoxy resin is blended with hexaphenoxy cyclotriphosphazene (HPCTP) to form a composite core emulsion. The surface morphology, particle size distribution, core−shell composition, and thermal stability of SFRM were analyzed via scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive spectrometry (EDS), Malvern, Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR), and TD-DSC-DTG. It is concluded that SFRM was successfully synthesized with superior particle size distribution and thermal stability. When the ratio of SiO 2 solution and EC alcohol solution reached 1:2, the particle size distribution of the microcapsules was 30−190 μm, and the D 50 decreased to 70 μm. The core material content, slow-release performance, and flame retardancy of SFRM were measured using a UV-1800 spectrophotometer and Hartmann tubes, and the compressive and repair properties of SFRM were evaluated by uniaxial compression tests. The results demonstrate that SFRM has satisfactory slow-release and flame-retardancy properties, the LC is 67%, and the first-order kinetic model shows the best fit and conforms to the non-Fickian diffusion mechanism. The SFRM repair rate can reach approximately 61%. This is of substantial significance to the field of self-repairing cement-based materials.
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