OFR-136-81 Upgrade Stench Fire Warning System - System Development And Prototype Tests

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 141
- File Size:
- 28812 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
This report describes development and demonstration of an upgraded stench fire warning system for underground wines. Current systems, which have been used since before 1920, release an ethyl mercaptan mixture into the mines' compressed and/or ventilation air during emergencies. Miners, when smelling ethyl mercaptan, evacuate the mine according to predetermined plans. These systems, while simple, have problems with safety and reliability. The upgraded system overcomes these problems. The system uses a different stench agent, is less toxic, less nauseating, and less corrosive than ethyl mercaptan. These combined with the feature of thiophane not reacting with iron oxides, makes the upgraded system safer and more reliable. The system also uses a combination of two simple principles: a standpipe with pressure balancing to provide a constant head, and a sized orifice to control the rate of release of the stench agent. This system enables the mine to release the agent for a longer period which provides better coverage and to ensure that miners will not be exposed to potentially toxic concentrations of the stench agent. The system is easy to operate, requiring only the turning of two 1/4-turn ball valves. The upgraded system has been successfully tested during two evacuation drills at an underground uranium mine. Using three injectors (one on the compressed air line and one on each of two intake air shafts), the system exhibited significant improvements in warning times over the mine's existing system. This report provides a detailed description of the system design and its demonstrated performance in two mine demonstrations.
Citation
APA:
(1981) OFR-136-81 Upgrade Stench Fire Warning System - System Development And Prototype TestsMLA: OFR-136-81 Upgrade Stench Fire Warning System - System Development And Prototype Tests. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1981.