Abstract

The physical and chemical properties of the air-dried residual coal after soaking in the goaf will change, resulting in an increase in its spontaneous combustion tendency. This study aimed to look into the features and mechanism of soaked-dried coal's spontaneous combustion. Five samples of coal were dried to various degrees, and the weight loss features during thermal processing were examined. Based on this, the pore structure and chemical structure characteristics of the coal samples with the highest tendency to spontaneous combustion were quantitatively examined, and the mechanism by which soaking-drying affected the spontaneous combustion heating process of the remaining coal in goaf was investigated in turn. The results show that T1 decreases with the increase of drying time, T2–T6 shows a fluctuating change, and the ignition activation energy of 36-S-Coal is smaller than that of other coal samples. The pore type of 36-S-Coal changes from a one-end closed impermeable pore to an open pore, and the pore group area is large. During the 36 h drying process, the internal channels of the coal were dredged, and a large number of gravels and minerals were precipitated from the pores with the air flow. A large number of gravels were around the pores to form a surface structure that was easy to adsorb various gases. Furthermore, infrared spectroscopy was used to analyze the two coal samples. It was found that soaking and drying did not change the functional group types of coal samples, but the fatty chain degree of 36-S-Coal was reduced to 1.56. It shows that the aliphatic chain structure of coal is changed after 36 h of drying after 30 days of soaking, which leads to the continuous shedding of aliphatic chain branches of residual coal, and the skeleton of coal is looser, which makes the low-temperature oxidation reaction of 36-S-Coal easier. Based on the above results, the coal-oxygen composite mechanism of water-immersed-dried coal is obtained, and it is considered that the key to the spontaneous combustion oxidation process of coal is to provide oxygen atoms and accelerate the formation of peroxides.

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