Morgan
International Hazard
Posts: 1689
Registered: 28-12-2010
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Plastic Recycling Factory Up In Smoke
Lots of black smoke
https://youtu.be/WLtHgjj05tk
|
|
Johanson
Harmless
Posts: 39
Registered: 23-3-2023
Member Is Offline
|
|
Looks like a polyethylene pipe manufacturer, "United Poly Systems". Massive fire indeed.
That's one way to recycle plastic, if you have a long enough time frame in mind
|
|
j_sum1
Administrator
Posts: 6292
Registered: 4-10-2014
Location: Unmoved
Member Is Offline
Mood: Organised
|
|
What a mess!
Does not look fightable. Probably have to let it burn out.
Of course, that means even more release into the atmosphere.
Just a thought...
Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done?
|
|
Keras
National Hazard
Posts: 873
Registered: 20-8-2018
Location: (48, 2)
Member Is Offline
|
|
Impressive. Is that tyres burning?
I love the firefighters but really, that puny water hose against such a blaze looks ridiculous.
[Edited on 8-8-2023 by Keras]
|
|
Parakeet
Hazard to Self
Posts: 74
Registered: 22-12-2022
Location: Japan
Member Is Offline
Mood: V (V)
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 |
Just a thought...
Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done? |
I’ve never heard such a method. I think that would probably make things even more uncontrollable. Mild fire is more manageable than fierce ones, and
residual combustibles are often not a problem.
But there is a method of extinguishing a wildfire by intentionally setting fire to burn out combustibles in the direction the fire is moving. So your
idea of burning out everything is not entirely wrong in some cases.
|
|
SnailsAttack
Hazard to Others
Posts: 165
Registered: 7-2-2022
Location: The bottom of Lake Ontario
Member Is Offline
|
|
That is one nasty-looking smoke cloud.
Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 | Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done? | humanity's long history of terrible ideas marches onward
|
|
j_sum1
Administrator
Posts: 6292
Registered: 4-10-2014
Location: Unmoved
Member Is Offline
Mood: Organised
|
|
Haha.
Not really wanting to provide material for the Darwin Awards.
I just know that for many fires, the only feasible option is to contain the fire, prevent spread, and wait until the fuel is exhausted. I also know
that a small explosion in a campfire can extinguish flames without necessarily spreading material too far. (No one owned up to throwing the aerosol
can in there.)
It seemed to me that there may exist niche situations where acceleration via oxidant may be beneficial. I wondered if this strategy has ever been
used.
Of course it would be unsuitable in this fire. That thing is starved of oxygen as it is. Complete combustion of all that soot would be very scary.
|
|
unionised
International Hazard
Posts: 5119
Registered: 1-11-2003
Location: UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Extinguishing oil well fires with explosives is well documented.
It would be impractical to run all that smoke + soot through a jet engine. But , if you could, it might actually get oxidised to CO2 and water.
|
|
SnailsAttack
Hazard to Others
Posts: 165
Registered: 7-2-2022
Location: The bottom of Lake Ontario
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 | It seemed to me that there may exist niche situations where acceleration via oxidant may be beneficial. | Possibly, yeah, but it'd have to somehow be safer or more cost-effective to bring in thousands of pounds' worth of chlorate or
nitrate salts than to douse it with water.
|
|
averageaussie
Hazard to Self
Posts: 85
Registered: 30-4-2023
Location: Right behind you
Member Is Offline
Mood: school
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 |
Just a thought...
Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done? |
there could maybe be a reason to in some niche cases? Where incomplete combustion releases nasty chemicals into the air. adding an oxidiser could
maybe reduce the amount of toxic smoke, which might mean that people in the surrounding area and downwind are less likely to be exposed. I do know
that large fires can suck up all the oxygen from an area, making the air unsafe to breathe, and adding an oxidiser might help this by giving the fire
oxygen to take other than from the air, but we have breathing apparatuses (apperati?) so the oxygen thing isn't an issue for the firefighters.
plus with a blaze the size of this, making it end quicker might not be terrible, I guess? less time wasted?
|
|
B(a)P
International Hazard
Posts: 1139
Registered: 29-9-2019
Member Is Offline
Mood: Festive
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by averageaussie | Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 |
Just a thought...
Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done? |
there could maybe be a reason to in some niche cases? Where incomplete combustion releases nasty chemicals into the air. adding an oxidiser could
maybe reduce the amount of toxic smoke, which might mean that people in the surrounding area and downwind are less likely to be exposed. I do know
that large fires can suck up all the oxygen from an area, making the air unsafe to breathe, and adding an oxidiser might help this by giving the fire
oxygen to take other than from the air, but we have breathing apparatuses (apperati?) so the oxygen thing isn't an issue for the firefighters.
plus with a blaze the size of this, making it end quicker might not be terrible, I guess? less time wasted?
|
I think there could be a few other applications for this.
- Force a fire to use up all available fuel before unfavourable weather conditions arrive.
- Possibly reduce airborne embers if they are consumed faster, not sure about that though, maybe it would be worse because the additional heat would
cause a greater updraft.
- less post fire residual contaminants that would otherwise have been generated through incomplete combustion such as PAHs and dioxins.
|
|
averageaussie
Hazard to Self
Posts: 85
Registered: 30-4-2023
Location: Right behind you
Member Is Offline
Mood: school
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by B(a)P | Quote: Originally posted by averageaussie | Quote: Originally posted by j_sum1 |
Just a thought...
Is there a case to be made for some fires (not necessarily this one) to deal with them by adding an oxidant? That way there is quicker combustion,
more complete combustion, and ideally less damage. It also introduces additional risks. Is this procedure ever done? |
there could maybe be a reason to in some niche cases? Where incomplete combustion releases nasty chemicals into the air. adding an oxidiser could
maybe reduce the amount of toxic smoke, which might mean that people in the surrounding area and downwind are less likely to be exposed. I do know
that large fires can suck up all the oxygen from an area, making the air unsafe to breathe, and adding an oxidiser might help this by giving the fire
oxygen to take other than from the air, but we have breathing apparatuses (apperati?) so the oxygen thing isn't an issue for the firefighters.
plus with a blaze the size of this, making it end quicker might not be terrible, I guess? less time wasted?
|
I think there could be a few other applications for this.
- Force a fire to use up all available fuel before unfavourable weather conditions arrive.
- Possibly reduce airborne embers if they are consumed faster, not sure about that though, maybe it would be worse because the additional heat would
cause a greater updraft.
- less post fire residual contaminants that would otherwise have been generated through incomplete combustion such as PAHs and dioxins.
|
forcing the fire to burn hotter is also risky though, could probably light other things on fire. in a situation like in the video it would be fine
(probably) but if a house is on fire, the risk of catching the whole neighborhood on fire is to great.
|
|