posted on 2024-11-13, 08:38authored byBasil Beamish, Patrick McLellan, Homero Endara, Umit Turunc, Michael Raab, Rowan Beamish
A moist coal adiabatic oven test has been used to quantify the effect of applying an anti-oxidant agent to reactive coals from Australia and the US. For the dosage rate applied, the anti-oxidant significantly reduces the coal self-heating rate and extends the time taken to reach thermal runaway by a factor of three for sub-bituminous coal and by a factor of two for the same application to high volatile C bituminous coal. The laboratory result obtained for sub-bituminous coal from Powder River Basin is in direct agreement with the practical site experience of applying the anti-oxidant product as a spontaneous combustion management control. Consequently, it is now possible to benchmark the application of the anti-oxidant to any reactive coal prior to mining as part of developing a leading practice spontaneous combustion management plan.
History
Citation
B. Beamish, P. McLellan, H. Endara, U. Turunc, M. Raab and R. Beamish, Delaying spontaneous combustion of reactive coals through inhibition, 13th Coal Operators' Conference, University of Wollongong, The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy & Mine Managers Association of Australia, 2013, 221-226.