Experimental study on the methane explosion suppression by ultra-fine water mist containing bacteria under degradation for five times

Ke Yang, Linjuan Wang, Hong Ji, Zhixiang Xing, Juncheng Jiang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In a semi-closed visualization pipeline, this experiment studied the inhibitory effect of ultra-fine pure water mist, ultra-fine water mist containing inorganic salt and ultra-fine water mist containing bacteria-inorganic salt on 9.8% methane explosion under five different quality of spray volume. Combined with the methane explosion suppression experiment, the ability of methane-oxidizing bacteria to degrade 9.8% of methane was studied in a simulated pipeline. Experiments showed that the addition of inorganic salt and the degradation of methane-oxidizing bacteria could improve the suppression explosion effect of ultra-fine water mist, and the suppression explosion effect was related to the volume of water mist. Under the same ultra-fine water mist condition, with the increase of the volume of water mist, the explosion suppression effect was improved. Compared with pure methane, pure water ultra-fine water mist, and inorganic salt ultra-fine water mist, the maximum explosion overpressure and flame propagation speed under the condition of bacteria-inorganic salt ultra-fine water mist were significantly reduced. Compared with the explosion of pure methane, due to the degradation of methane by methane-oxidizing bacteria, when the degradation time was 10 h, and the volume of ultra-fine water mist containing bacteria-inorganic salt was 12.5 mL, the maximum explosion overpressure dropped significantly from 0.663 to 0.343 MPa, a decrease of 48.27%. The appearance time of the maximum explosion overpressure was delayed from 208.8 to 222.6 ms. The peak flame velocity was 4 m s−1, which was 83.3% lower than that of 9.8% pure methane explosion. This study will contribute to the development of efficient ultrafine water mist synergistic inhibitors for the prevention of methane explosion disasters.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)37835-37847
Number of pages13
JournalEnvironmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume31
Issue number25
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Degradation for five times
  • Flame characteristics
  • Maximum explosion overpressure
  • Methane explosion suppression
  • Methane-Oxidizing bacteria
  • Ultrafine water mist

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