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clean agent

cda

SAWHORSE
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
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Location
Basement
Does anyone have anyone's departments have operations guidelines for working in a building with clean agent systems???

or is it just common sense on what should and should not be done??
 
any guidelines for the firefighters going into a building with clean agent extinguishing systems. what to do or not do
 
also, the question came up clean agent has dumped do you go in and see what is going on???

do you wait to do anything till the hold time, unless the place is roaring with fire.
 
cda said:
also, the question came up clean agent has dumped do you go in and see what is going on??? do you wait to do anything till the hold time, unless the place is roaring with fire.
Depends on the facility but in most cases if there's any possibility of someone still being in the area our SOP's have always been to make entry and perform a search (obviously wearing PPE as discussed above).
 
Same as Msradell but if the system was designed in accordance with NFPA 2001 and inspected properly, maintained with no alterations since acceptance or addressed and re-accepted, there should be no roaring fire due to the interruption of the chain reaction allowing for a roaring fire to break out of the protected area :)
 
Thanks all question came during a walk through of a new facility and since I fight fires with a code book was not sure of a good answer

Just reaching out to the vast knowledge here
 
One other consideration since your asking for guidance and that is the products of combustion. If you look at the chemical formulations of the current clean agents in the market place you'll see two classes of materials:

-hydrochloroflurocarbons (HCFCs)

-Inert gases

HCFCs are very reliable and environmentally friendly. But my concern is heating these agents. When you start subjecting HCFCs to moderately high temperatures, one can generate hydrofluoric (HF) and hydrochloric acids. HF is a pretty nasty (but useful) compound. In my old brain I seem to recall that PBI and Kevlar both have somewhat poor resistance to HF.

A useful and well prepared paper on clean agents is at:

http://www.fike.com/documents/firesupp/firessys/ecaro/white_papers/Role%20of%20Hydrofluorocarbons.pdf

I don't work for them and I'm not marketing their products.
 
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