Bulkheads and stoppings
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Placement of bulkheads and stoppings underground to plug or seal off a fire from the rest of the mine is common practice in active operating mines where the workings are readily accessible. In this way, mining can continue uninterrupted in one area of a mine while a fire burns in another area. The seals serve to exclude oxygen and prevent ventilation.
However, it has long been recognized[3] that even when direct access is possible, it is very difficult to make perfectly tight seals as the cover rock is generally broken up to the surface and the fire can obtain air through innumerable unnoticed fissures. In a detailed study of 177 fires in the anthracite coal mines of Pennsylvania (USA), McElroy[4] indicates that underground seals were generally not successful due to the extent of fracturing present and indicates a poor success rate (five of 24 attempts) in these active mine situations. McElroy reports that fracturing of the rock mass above the fire zones (Fig. 2) allowed the fires to breathe to great depth through natural ventilation driven by convection from rising combustion gases.
Barometric pressure variations between the surface and isolated underground workings place tremendous stress on seals used to isolate a fire zone, making it difficult to effect or maintain a good seal. Methane can also accumulate behind a seal, building up pressure as it does so, and cause seals to fail[4].
Inertization, nitrogen or carbon dioxide gas injection
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An inert atmosphere that is unable to support combustion is created in sealed off areas as the active fire consumes the available oxygen and combustion gases accumulate. This process can be accelerated through injection of an inert gas such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide to displace and exclude oxygen. However, if leakage occurs before the area around the fire zone cools sufficiently, reignition will occur if an inert state cannot be maintained. In practice, this is often the case and a continuous supply of inert gas must be provided to offset the amount of leakage that occurs.
Ray et al.[5] present a table of inert gas injection rates and volumes that have been used at a number of operating mines to control spontaneous heating and fire. These data indicate a very wide range of injection rates, varying from 190 m3/h to as much as 3,600 m3/h with a total volume of up to 7 million m3 injected. The ratio of the volume of gas injected to the volume of void treated in these cases varied from 1.65:1 to more than 10:1 depending on leakage rates. Ide[6] presents a case study of a full-scale inert gas injection design to extinguish the fire in an abandoned coal mine. Based on a pilot CO2 injection test, Ide estimates that it would require injection of 100 kg/h (approximately 53 m3/h for CO2) of inert gas to overcome the air leakage rate, sustained for approximately 1 year for the fire zone to cool sufficiently to prevent reignition.
Dynamic pressure balancing, ventilation control
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Underground seals are not airtight structures due to rock fractures and construction defects and some leakage will occur[7]. Mine workings and bulkheads or seals will 'breathe in and out' with changes in barometric pressure[8]. Leakage can be reduced by controlling the air pressures in the adjoining mine workings using the mine ventilation system. This is done by maintaining positive pressures across underground seals by adjusting for barometric pressure variations. This technique greatly improves the effectiveness of seals but is only applicable for controlling fires in active mines with operating ventilation equipment.
Application of fire-fighting chemicals
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There are common chemicals and commercial fire-suppressants available that can inhibit and control heating and combustion of coal with varying degrees of success[9]. These materials can be sprayed onto the surface of the coal to limit the air contact, to reduce spontaneous combustion chemistry reactions, and to remove heat. This includes various gels to both seal off oxygen and lower the temperature.
The use of fire suppressants is generally restricted to local application in active mines due to the cost. For the high-volume injection required to combat an active coal fire or large gob area, cost would be a significant factor. To lower cost, foam can be used to transport and fill the combustion zone with fire suppressants in a more disperse fashion than in liquid form. Gusek et al.[10] present an innovative approach for treating waste rock from hard rock mining operations with foam containing chemical inhibitors to form a coating or thin film that limits oxidation to prevent acid rock drainage.
It is unlikely that fire suppression from a chemical coating could remain effective long enough for heat from a fire to dissipate sufficiently to preclude re-ignition given the spalling and caving that is likely to occur and expose fresh coal. Hence, the use of fire suppressing chemicals is better suited for inhibiting spontaneous combustion in active mines or storage bunkers, for very recent fires, or when used in conjunction with other extinguishment methods to enhance their effectiveness.
Application of a surface coating or sealant to prevent oxidation
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Similar to chemical inhibitors, sealing and lining agents have been applied to coat the coal surface to prevent oxidation. Sealing agents typically combine an inhibitor such as calcium chloride, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, ferrous sulphate, and aluminum sulphate with a binding agent and filler such as bentonite[11]. Physical coatings of gypsum as well as plaster, hydrated lime, cement, and fly ash have also been used to seal the coal surface[12].
The application process must be completed before significant heating or ignition starts and must be maintained indefinitely. The lining must be reapplied where deformation and cracking of the roof or spalling of pillars or ribs occurs. This technique is not suitable for treatment of large volumes of broken gob or for extinguishing an active fire.
High-expansion foam
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High-expansion foam makes it possible to convey moisture in the foam to all parts of a coal mine including the upper levels and fractures in the roof and overburden. Typically, the foam would be generated underground at a safe distance from the fire and blown toward the fire to completely fill the roadways and mined out areas and block oxygen. Introduced for combating mine fires in 2003, compressed gas foam offered greatly improved performance over high-expansion foam. This included the use of much finer textured foam with smaller bubbles that greatly enhanced the effective life of the foam and the ability to inject foam remotely through boreholes.
In 2003, CAFSCO Fire Control, a commercial firefighting company from Burleson, Texas (USA) used biodegradable foam made with compressed nitrogen to help isolate and control a relatively recent fire in an operating mine, along with remotely installed fly ash-cement seals. About 18 million gallons of nitrogen-enhanced foam were injected over a period of 9 d to isolate the fire and seal the gob for inerting with nitrogen[13]. This allowed recovery teams to re-enter the mine to erect underground seals around the fire and for mining to resume just 3 months later.
CAFSCO pumped more than 700 million gallons of compressed nitrogen foam into an operating coal mine in Virginia (USA) in 2007 to put out a very large mine fire[14] and claimed the method had worked on dozens of coal fires across the US by 2012[15]. There are no details available on any of these efforts in the literature, so it is not known if these were surface or underground; operating, closed or abandoned coal mines. Unfortunately, the company ceased operations in 2014 when its founder developed cancer from exposure to smoke from the very fires he fought to extinguish[16].
Compressed gas foam has a limited effective life that requires continual injection underground over time to remain effective until the fire is extinguished. In the case of a fire that has been burning in an abandoned coal mine for an appreciable length of time, there is a large amount of stored heat energy present in the rock mass surrounding the fire. Unless the foam can be maintained long enough for the heat to dissipate, re-ignition is likely after the foam dissipates and the supply of oxygen slowly increases.
The use of compressed gas foam systems is better suited for fires in operating coal mines or for very young coal fires, not abandoned mines with long-standing fires. Although CAFSCO claimed in 2012 that it could 'put out' the infamous Centralia Pennsylvania (USA) coal mine fire in a month for about ${\$} $60 million using compressed nitrogen foam[15], it is unlikely the fire would remain out unless the heat was removed.
In an unsuccessful attempt to extinguish a mine fire, a coal mine in Illinois (USA) injected 46,000 gallons of firefighting foam containing perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS that has since been linked to surface and groundwater pollution[17,18]. Foams containing PFAS are designed for flammable liquid fires, also called Class B fires. The PFAS serve as surfactants that spread the foam to cool and suppress the fire. While extremely effective, PFAS are also a major source of pollution and have now been banned in many states.
Excavation
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For fires in shallow abandoned mine workings or coal seam fires, direct attack of the fire by excavating and quenching the burning coal with foam or water is the most reliable method for extinguishing the fire. Once the coal has been quenched and cooled, it is mixed with cool overburden, placed back in the excavation and covered with soil.
As the depth to the fire increases, the cost of this method and the area of surface disturbance increases exponentially, eventually becoming a limiting factor. The excavation method of extinguishment creates a large amount of surface disturbance, essentially requiring the ground to be rebuilt from the coal seam upwards, and cannot be used for mine fires beneath developed areas or in rugged terrain (Fig. 3).
The US Department of Interior Bureau of Mines conducted extensive mine fire research and control efforts from 1910 until 1996, performing control or extinguishment efforts on approximately 347 mine fires[1]. Based on this experience, excavation was found to be the most effective control method, being successful in 57 out of 78 attempts (73%), but it was also the most expensive[19−21].
Isolation
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Excavating a continuous trench around an underground mine fire has been used to create a noncombustible zone to cut-off and isolate the burning coal to prevent the fire from spreading. For relatively shallow mine fires and coal seam fires this is an excellent approach to create a continuous barrier across which the fire cannot spread. However, within the confines created by the barrier, the fire continues to burn unabated with attendant hazards and environmental consequences, and may continue to burn for a considerable period of time. The cost of this method also rises quickly as the depth to the fire increases and has a practical depth limit (Fig. 4).
In some extreme cases, tunneling or re-mining of coal underground has been proposed as a means of isolating a fire[22]. The costs and associated safety risks of this approach are quite high and will not be feasible in most cases.
Inundation with water
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Efforts to quench a mine fire directly and cool the surrounding rock mass with water by flooding the mine have been successful in limited instances where complete inundation could be achieved, such as mines which are below the water table and were dewatered for mining. Considerable efforts have been made to flood mines on fire by creating dams and seals and filling the workings with water by pumping. However, these have generally been unsuccessful due to leakage of the water and inability to completely inundate the upper portions of the fire. In some cases, fires have been extinguished by completely flooding the mine with water for months; only to re-ignite due to residual heat and spontaneous combustion in damp coal dust, fines and rubble once the water is drained, and in some case even in areas where the fire didn't previously exist[3,23,24].
Attempts to extinguish a fire with water percolated into the mine from surface application, infiltration from ponding (Fig. 5), or by injection through boreholes, has also been attempted at many mine fires, with little success. Since the flow of water through the rock and mine workings is uncontrolled, it follows the path of least resistance down gradient, thus almost assuring that portions of the fire or heated rock mass will be by-passed by the water and remain unquenched. Attempts to overcome this drawback of the method include the use of closely spaced injection borings to disperse the water more uniformly, and the use of steam or mist injection. Slightly better results can be achieved in this fashion, but not reliably so, and at significantly increased cost due to the large number of injection borings required. The US Bureau of Mines conducted a number of water inundation fire-control projects on both active and inactive mines, with a success rate of just 21 out of 41 attempts (51%)[4,19,20].
When injecting water into the high-temperature environment of an underground coal mine fire, geyser-like eruptions of steam and hot water have been known to occur[25]. When injected into superheated areas of the mine fire, hydrolysis of the water into an explosive mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide or 'water gas' may also occur under the extreme temperatures.
Surface seals
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Surface seals are commonly constructed by placing a four- to ten-foot-thick layer of compacted soil or pulverized rock over a coal seam or mine fire area to exclude air from the fire. Surface seals smother a fire by inhibiting ventilation of the fire zone; denying oxygen and causing combustion gases to accumulate in order to smother the fire. The seal material must contain sufficient fine-grained particles to prevent ventilation and exclude oxygen. In some cases, seals constructed using pulverized rock were too porous such that the fire could easily breathe throughout the entire slope and the fire spread. If too much fine-grained clay-rich material is present, the seal may crack due to shrinkage as it loses moisture and dries, compromising the integrity of the seal.
Seasonal climatic cycles, changing weather patterns, and barometric pressure variations all place stress on a seal that may compromise its integrity. Freeze/thaw cycles can induce movement of rocks within the seal material by 'frost jacking' which has been attributed as the apparent cause of vent pathways at some sites[21]. Subsidence induced fracturing or erosion of a surface seal also allow air to enter.
Pressure differences between the confined space of the mine workings and open atmosphere create a gradient that can cause leaks in seals and allow air exchange and a renewed supply of oxygen. Chaiken et al.[26] indicate that leaks in sealed areas can develop as a result of rising hot combustion gases which create convection currents that draw in more fresh air. These leaks provide natural ventilation to circulate air and vent combustion gases that can reignite a fire which has been inactive for a long time due to the amount of heat retained in the rock mass. Studies have shown that coal can smolder indefinitely at 2% oxygen concentrations[27] such that even slight leakage can sustain a fire indefinitely.
Kim & Chaiken[28] suggest that a surface seal must be maintained for a period of 10 to 20 years while the stored heat dissipates in order to extinguish a fire. However, in practice this is often difficult to achieve and surface seals frequently fail due to settling, drying, shrinkage, subsidence, erosion, slope failure, or increased fire activity (Fig. 6).
Once a breach in the surface seal occurs, the fire can regenerate quickly if maintenance of the seal is not performed. Timely inspection and repair of damaged seals is often difficult to accomplish in practice and many surface seals ultimately prove ineffective at controlling the fire. Because surface seals disrupt ventilation patterns, the altered flow and circulation of hot combustion gases underground may also cause the fire to ignite in other areas of the mine. As the ventilation patterns change, the movement of hot gases can cause the fire to propagate from one area to the next in a discontinuous fashion.
Surface seals have been the primary abatement approach used in the western United States due to the relative ease and low cost of the method, and lack of water at most sites[29,30]. However, Renner[31] reports that of the 20 sites in Colorado where surface seals were implemented for extinguishing mine fires from 1952 through 1974 by the Bureau of Mines, only eight appeared to be dormant in 2005, a success rate of only 40%. Overall, Rushworth et al.[21] report a 43% success rate for 37 surface seal mine fire control efforts conducted in Colorado (USA).
Similarly, Magnuson[20] reports an overall success rate of 42% for surface seals constructed at 86 eastern bituminous mine fires. Surface seals were used more often than other methods for eastern bituminous mine fires as this approach was the least costly and was considered the only viable approach for a well-established fire under deep cover. Surface seals may best be used in conjunction with backfill methods such as flushing, grouting, etc. or other approaches.
Underground seals
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Since the workings in an inactive mine generally cannot be safely accessed, there has been a considerable amount of research over the years into suitable means and methods for placing a variety of seals and barriers remotely underground from the surface[23,32]. Invariably problems creating an adequate seal have been encountered and further study recommended. In a more recent report summarizing full scale testing of remotely placed grout seals, Gray et al.[33] concluded that attempting to place a reliable seal in a blind fashion without an observation borehole is virtually impossible, even then it is very difficult.
Construction of underground seals remotely also requires locating intact tunnels in which to place the seal, which can be a challenge in an abandoned mine. Often coal pillars would be robbed during secondary retreat mining to increase recovery of the coal, resulting in extensive collapse and caving of the mine workings. Under such conditions, suitable locations in which to place a seal can be quite limited and effectively impossible to locate remotely in a blind fashion from the surface using drill holes. As the number of seals required increases, so does the complexity.
Numerous case histories have shown that when seals and barriers are incomplete and only partially effective, changes to the ventilation patterns often result in spread of the fire. If the flow of air and combustion gases through the mine are simply re-routed as a result of localized seals or barriers and sufficient heat remains underground, the fire will likely re-ignite elsewhere and spread. Chaiken et al.[26] caution that there is little evidence that isolated tunnel barriers are successful at containing fires, and may only serve to retard and change the direction of fire propagation. Similarly, Rushworth et al.[21] suggest that 'abatement activities .... might alter the circulation of air and fumes to the extent that the fire spreads or starts in an unexpected location', and in fact this has happened all too often in practice.
Thus, placement of underground seals to control or extinguish a fire in abandoned mine workings is not a practical or reliable approach, and may actually complicate the fire and extinguishment efforts that are ultimately then required.
Noncombustible barriers
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Placing wide fire-proof barriers of noncombustible material underground to isolate a mine fire has been attempted on many occasions, but with limited success on a historical basis in an inactive mine. In an inactive mine, construction of the barrier must be conducted remotely through boreholes, and in a blind fashion. Experience has shown this is an extremely difficult way to ensure a complete and sufficient barrier is adequately and suitably constructed to provide the necessary isolation. As often as not, isolation barriers have failed by being placed in the wrong location due to inadequate characterization of a fire to begin with, and failure to identify discontinuous fire zones or changes that occur in the fire during, or caused by, the construction activities.
Magnuson[20] reported a low success rate of just seven out of 27 attempts at using underground barriers in the eastern bituminous coal fields (USA). These unsuccessful attempts to install noncombustible barriers include multiple efforts at the now infamous mine fire at Centralia, Pennsylvania (USA) which ultimately forced evacuation of the entire town. Failure of the isolation barriers in the case of Centralia can be attributed to underestimating the extent of the fire initially, a lack of sufficient funding to complete effective barriers, ineffective material placement and poor construction oversight. Unfortunately, these issues appear to be all too common occurrences when it comes to historical reports of attempts to extinguish abandoned mine fires.
Invariably it is also impossible to construct an isolation barrier without having un-mined coal in the form of boundary pillars, floor or roof coal, or a rider coal seam or carbonaceous shale that penetrates the barrier and provides the fire with a fuel path through the barrier. This method also has the disadvantage in that the fire is generally left to burn unabated behind the isolation barrier, with the potential for associated health and safety issues to continue for a considerable amount of time before the fire eventually burns itself out.
Hydraulic backfilling or 'flushing'
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Using water to wash or 'flush' material into mine workings hydraulically to extinguish a fire by backfilling the workings is essentially a method of permanently flooding it, but with solid material instead of water. Very large volumes of backfill material can be injected into underground workings quite economically as a hydraulic slurry composed of soil or sand and water, but it is difficult to control final placement of the solids.
The hydraulic flushing method is believed to have been devised by a Catholic priest in the 1860s in the anthracite coalfields of Pennsylvania (USA) and then implemented by the mining company to protect his church against subsidence[34]. The method was also used historically to fight mine fires in the anthracite field from the late 1800s until decline of the district in the 1940s. Davis[35] describes the process of flushing culm (coal waste) into anthracite mines with water, where it was determined that the smaller the particles were, the better the hydraulic backfill worked at filling cracks and crevices to provide support. The smaller particles also required less water to transport, with material ranging from 'rice- to dust-sized particles' working best. Davis concluded that mine fires could be extinguished by backfilling the chambers surrounding the fire with fine culm by flushing.
McElroy[4] indicated that hydraulic backfilling with fine culm, which he terms slushing, was a great deal more effective for controlling mine fires than placing underground seals, having extinguished the fire in 50% of the instances (12 of 24) in which it was tried. McElroy suggests that 'by filling a large part of the voids in what is a partly sealed fire area, flow of air is greatly retarded and inflow by "breathing" [sic] likewise. Slushing therefore appears to offer an ideal method of retarding the progress of fires and, where its placement is under sufficient control, offers probably the most effective method of making a seal in broken ground and inaccessible openings'. However, McElroy indicates that the cost for using this approach circa 1938 was prohibitive except for small fire areas. Griffith et al.[23] also cautioned that the size of the fire and the area to be backfilled using this method may be prohibitively large unless the backfill material and water can be obtained at reasonable cost.
Chaiken et al.[26] considered hydraulic backfilling to be generally more effective than sealing in steep anthracite mine fires and the most effective method in broken ground or when conducted remotely. However, these authors note that in hydraulic flushing, fractures above the caved strata are often not filled, and it is difficult to create a complete seal in rubble-filled caved areas and in steeply dipping seams; the tendency being for the flow of water to carry material down dip to some unknown point. Chaiken et al.[26] indicate hydraulic flushing to be most effective when deposition can be controlled or contained such that the injected material remains in place.
Philbin & Holbrook[19] reported that blind flushing through boreholes using hydraulic methods had an overall success rate of six out of 14 attempts at controlling or extinguishing coal mine fires historically. These authors concluded that the hydraulic flushing generally does not provide a tight enough seal to preclude ventilation of the fire area and will flow to the low points in steeply inclined workings. Philbin & Holbrook also reported that flushing with sand had proven successful at extinguishing mine fires in three of five situations in which it had been attempted. They theorize that because sand is heavier than other particles commonly used for flushing, like coal refuse and fly ash, it settles in place more readily, packs more tightly, and consolidates less over time to allow oxygen pathways. Although its overall success rate was low, hydraulic flushing was considered effective for small fires in flat coal beds.
In the Wuda area of China, attempts to extinguish mine fires incorporated localized injection of a mixture of water, ash, and colloids, essentially a mud slurry, under high pressure to fill up cavities and fractures underground, and then covering the burning areas with loess, gravel, and rock in efforts to deplete the fire of oxygen. Studies conducted between 2004 and 2010 indicated that the total number of fires was decreased from 18 to 6 as a result of these extinguishment efforts, but unfortunately the total area affected by the fires increased from approximately 160 to 227 hectares[36]. Since mud slurry is heavy it will flow to the lowest portions of the mine and may not fully reach the roof in all areas. As the slurry dries, it will also shrink and develop mud cracks that can allow air entry (Fig. 7).
One of the key benefits of hydraulic backfilling are that it is an economical means for placing a large volume of backfill underground. The method is also suitable for a wide range of materials which helps to reduce costs. However, there are several distinct drawbacks to the method, including:
• Hydraulic flushing requires very large volumes of water to be injected with the backfill material.
• Turbulent flow is required to maintain the solids in suspension and a minimum flow velocity must be maintained, usually several feet per second at least. This makes it virtually impossible to deposit noncombustible solid backfill materials tight to the roof of openings or into dead end nooks and crevices where flow cannot occur.
• High velocity turbulent flow often erodes channels in previously deposited material thereby preventing an adequate seal.
• There have been cases where hydraulic flushing has resulted in large volumes of steam and water being explosively ejected from boreholes creating a safety hazard as the water contacted the super-heated fire zone.
Devers[37] presents a fascinating account of a successful 4-year effort to extinguish an anthracite fire in the Red Ash Company's Jersey Mine by washing clay into the workings using water. However, the efforts to surround and inundate the fire zone with noncombustible material required extensive effort to construct elaborate underground bulkheads and what was estimated to be over a billion gallons of water to flush the clay into the mine. Similarly, Lynde[38] reports that injecting culm by flushing through 6-in diameter boreholes to extinguish a fire burning for more than 50 years required 2 billion gallons of water at a total cost of ${\$} $2 million circa 1909.
Pneumatic stowing
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Pneumatic stowing is a dry process in which compressed air is used to transport and place backfill material in mine workings, either directly or through boreholes. This eliminates some of the difficulties associated with the large volumes of water required for hydraulic flushing methods[37,38]. Walker[39] reports that pneumatic stowing was first applied in Germany in 1924, and became the preferred backfilling method there. Dutt[40] describes stowing methods in use in India, indicating the method can be used to avoid most of the dangers arising from fires or subsidence due to coal mining. Pneumatic stowing is not widely practiced in the United States; typically, its use being limited to small-scale applications like building seals in active mines or filling behind tunnel liners.
Heavilon et al.[41] describe a method and apparatus for pneumatically stowing fly ash or other granular material in mine workings to support the overburden and create a noncombustible barrier to prevent or hinder advance of a fire. Pneumatic stowing offers better control over the final placement of backfill material than hydraulic flushing. However, the pneumatic placement method has the disadvantage of introducing additional air into the fire, requires more closely spaced injection points than hydraulic flushing, and is unable to penetrate fractures or rubble effectively.
Inert gas can be used in lieu of air in the pneumatic injection process with the added benefit of excluding oxygen from the fire zone, but at increased cost. Additionally, fly ash is used extensively in construction as a concrete additive and for soil treatment, and may not be readily available or inexpensive. Some of the noncombustible barriers at Centralia were constructed by pneumatic injection of fly ash, involving 122,556 tons of fly ash placed through 1,600 boreholes, but were ultimately breached by the mine fire[20].
Grouting
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Griffith et al.[23] reports that grouting can be a very effective method to fill voids and exclude air from a fire. Grout is injected into the mine workings and collapse zones (gob) remotely through boreholes from the surface (Fig. 8) to extinguish the fire, stabilize the ground, and prevent ventilation to reduce the possibility of re-ignition. Void-fill grout injection with sand-cement-fly ash mixtures traditionally adopted for mine subsidence control can be used to extinguish coal mine fires provided a high percentage of the mine voids and also fractures in the surrounding rock mass can be infilled. However, this method of treatment is very expensive and grouting has generally been limited to seals and barriers, or small fires and treatment of localized active combustion 'hot spot' due to the high cost of the grout.
The high temperature environment of a mine fire can cause flash setting in cementitious grouts. This can compromise grout placement by preventing adequate grout takes and suitable distribution of the grout from each injection point. Shrinkage of grout as it sets can also cause cracking that allows air transmission.
Thermal degradation of Portland cement begins to occur around a temperature of 65−90 °C. For this reason, the American Concrete Institute code for concrete construction specifies a maximum temperature limit of 71 °C to ensure predictable concrete behavior[42]. When heated above a temperature of 100 °C, water entrained in the grout aggregate will convert to steam and expand, which can also cause cracking of the grout. At a temperature of 400 °C the cement paste dehydrates and shrinks in volume while siliceous aggregates expand, causing the grout to crack. As the temperature approaches 500 °C, Portland cement paste undergoes chemical changes and decomposes, which causes significant shrinkage and cracking and an increase in porosity[43]. With temperatures inside a coal fire able to reach 800–1,200 °C or more, the use of normal Portland cement-based grouts for combating a mine fire may be compromised and ineffective at creating an adequate seal. The high temperature performance of grout can be improved through the use of refractory calcium sulfo-aluminate cement, but at a higher cost.
Many efforts to extinguish larger underground fires by isolating the fire with targeted grouting have initially been effective at decreasing the fire following treatment, but then ultimately resulted in spread of the fire. Grouting in this manner to extinguish a long-standing mine fire has been likened to a frustrating and very expensive version of the 'whack-a-mole' arcade game where the fire is suppressed or extinguished at one location only to pop up somewhere else, often a considerable distance away[44,45]. The stored heat energy that persists underground from a fire that has been burning for a long time causes the coal to ignite in other areas where oxygen is present or later becomes reintroduced. This can occur years, or even decades later, as fresh air is able to enter through the formation of new cracks and fissures.
To prevent re-ignition by injecting enough grout to treat the entire underground mine area at most historic mine fires would be impossible within reasonable funding limits. Therefore, due to cost limitations, grouting may be unsuccessful for all but the smallest, relatively young fires, and alternative methods are likely necessary to combat large long-standing coal mine fires.