IC 6970 Liquid Carbon Dioxide Used To Extinguish A Gob Fire In A German Coal Mine

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
George S. Rice
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
6
File Size:
1668 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1937

Abstract

A novel method of extinguishing a mine fire in a stowed or gob-filled area by employing liquid carbon dioxide under high pressure eras used recently with success at the President (Prasident) coal mine, Bochum, Germany, as reported by P. Cabolet in Gluckauf (Apr. 24, 1937, p. 393) The use of carbon dioxide gas as a fire-fighting agent in surface plants and in ships is now general practice in the United. States, but when it has been tried for extinguishing fires in mines in large areas more or less confined by stoppings it has not been successful. Examples of the latter method of attempting to fight mine fires are given in Bureau of Mines Bulletin 229, Fifty-Nine Coal-Mine Fires; How They Were Fought and That They Teach, by G. S. Rice, J. VT. Paul, and 14. VT. von Bernewitz (1927). The reason for its nonsuccess may be either that the stoppings are not tight or that the roof and pillars are more or less fissured and enough air passes into the area to sustain a slow fire, whether of spontaneous origin or produced by gas explosion or other source of ignition.
Citation

APA: George S. Rice  (1937)  IC 6970 Liquid Carbon Dioxide Used To Extinguish A Gob Fire In A German Coal Mine

MLA: George S. Rice IC 6970 Liquid Carbon Dioxide Used To Extinguish A Gob Fire In A German Coal Mine. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1937.

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