T. Kawahara, Shuichi Hatae, T. Kanyama, Yukihito Ishizaki, K. Uezu
{"title":"Development of Eco-Friendly Soap-Based Firefighting Foam for Forest Fire","authors":"T. Kawahara, Shuichi Hatae, T. Kanyama, Yukihito Ishizaki, K. Uezu","doi":"10.2525/ECB.54.75","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In recent years, large-scale forest fires have been occurring frequently worldwide and 60,000 to 140,000 km of forests have been vanishing yearly. The forest fires and the damage from the smoke associated with them have caused lost of human life and health hazards as well as loss of forest vegetation, biomass, and ecosystems in massive areas. The damage in the Europe’s Mediterranean coast, North America’s west coast, Russia, and Australia are especially serious. There were over 170 large-scale forest fires concentrated throughout Greece from June to October in 2007. Additionally, in 2007 the forest fires that broke out from October 20 to 23 in Southern California of North America over an area almost equivalent to the size of Tokyo (2,187 km) destroyed approximately 2,000 km of forests and about 1,700 homes in 7 d time until October 27 (Hayasaka, 2010). In these forest fires, the use of firefighting foam has greatly improved fire extinguishing effects. The surfactant in firefighting foam significantly lowers surface tension in water and allows water to be efficiently adherent to flammable materials and additionally allows water to penetrate into the flammable materials. Because of this, it is highly effective in firefighting efforts by the increased cooling effect, suppression of oxygen supply, suppression of chemical reactions in the flammable material, and blockage of radiated heat, etc. However, for forest fires, the use of water alone is common in extinguishing activities. This is because the mountainous areas are also the source of water for urban residents and the pollution caused by the run-off from the firefighting foam into rivers and the surrounding environment would be especially concerning. A cautious stance in the use of firefighting foam is being taken and even in the United States, therefore, there was a case where the concern regarding secondary environmental damage from firefighting foam led to allowing fires to extinguish naturally and resulted in a large area of new and old forests to be destroyed. We have been developing firefighting foam involving naturally derived fatty acid salts (soap) as the main component. The soap is much lower in toxicity to aquatic organisms compared to synthetic detergents with environmental water in river, lake and sea (Lin et al., 2006; Kawano et al., 2007; Goto et al., 2007; 2008; Kawano et al., 2014). The reason why the toxicity of the soap is lower to aquatic microorganisms and fish is that it reacts with metal ions such as calcium ions that exist in the environment to form metal soap. The metal soap does not have the interfacial activity and its toxicity is significantly low. It is desirable to use soap that has very low toxicity to aquatic organisms since the spreading fire extinguishing agents could have a large impact on the natural environment. The soap-based firefighting foam is diluted by 1 wt% with environmental water in use. The metal ions such as calcium ions in the environmental water may cause the forming of metal soap, and the interfacial activity may be lowered. Therefore, it is necessary to add a chelating agent in the firefighting foam to prevent soap and metal ions from forming metal soap. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), commonly used chelating agent, is very effective in masking metal ions. However, EDTA is much less biodegradable and its long-term residual in the environment, particularly as heavy metal complex, raises concerns about ecotoxicities (Oviedo et al., 2003). For this reason, the highly biodegradable chelating agent, L-glutamic acid N,Ndiacetic acid (GLDA), was used in firefighting foam for general buildings (Mizuki et al., 2007). However, the firefighting foam with GLDA suffered from the disadvan-","PeriodicalId":11762,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Control in Biology","volume":"54 1","pages":"75-78"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"16","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Control in Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2525/ECB.54.75","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 16
Abstract
In recent years, large-scale forest fires have been occurring frequently worldwide and 60,000 to 140,000 km of forests have been vanishing yearly. The forest fires and the damage from the smoke associated with them have caused lost of human life and health hazards as well as loss of forest vegetation, biomass, and ecosystems in massive areas. The damage in the Europe’s Mediterranean coast, North America’s west coast, Russia, and Australia are especially serious. There were over 170 large-scale forest fires concentrated throughout Greece from June to October in 2007. Additionally, in 2007 the forest fires that broke out from October 20 to 23 in Southern California of North America over an area almost equivalent to the size of Tokyo (2,187 km) destroyed approximately 2,000 km of forests and about 1,700 homes in 7 d time until October 27 (Hayasaka, 2010). In these forest fires, the use of firefighting foam has greatly improved fire extinguishing effects. The surfactant in firefighting foam significantly lowers surface tension in water and allows water to be efficiently adherent to flammable materials and additionally allows water to penetrate into the flammable materials. Because of this, it is highly effective in firefighting efforts by the increased cooling effect, suppression of oxygen supply, suppression of chemical reactions in the flammable material, and blockage of radiated heat, etc. However, for forest fires, the use of water alone is common in extinguishing activities. This is because the mountainous areas are also the source of water for urban residents and the pollution caused by the run-off from the firefighting foam into rivers and the surrounding environment would be especially concerning. A cautious stance in the use of firefighting foam is being taken and even in the United States, therefore, there was a case where the concern regarding secondary environmental damage from firefighting foam led to allowing fires to extinguish naturally and resulted in a large area of new and old forests to be destroyed. We have been developing firefighting foam involving naturally derived fatty acid salts (soap) as the main component. The soap is much lower in toxicity to aquatic organisms compared to synthetic detergents with environmental water in river, lake and sea (Lin et al., 2006; Kawano et al., 2007; Goto et al., 2007; 2008; Kawano et al., 2014). The reason why the toxicity of the soap is lower to aquatic microorganisms and fish is that it reacts with metal ions such as calcium ions that exist in the environment to form metal soap. The metal soap does not have the interfacial activity and its toxicity is significantly low. It is desirable to use soap that has very low toxicity to aquatic organisms since the spreading fire extinguishing agents could have a large impact on the natural environment. The soap-based firefighting foam is diluted by 1 wt% with environmental water in use. The metal ions such as calcium ions in the environmental water may cause the forming of metal soap, and the interfacial activity may be lowered. Therefore, it is necessary to add a chelating agent in the firefighting foam to prevent soap and metal ions from forming metal soap. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), commonly used chelating agent, is very effective in masking metal ions. However, EDTA is much less biodegradable and its long-term residual in the environment, particularly as heavy metal complex, raises concerns about ecotoxicities (Oviedo et al., 2003). For this reason, the highly biodegradable chelating agent, L-glutamic acid N,Ndiacetic acid (GLDA), was used in firefighting foam for general buildings (Mizuki et al., 2007). However, the firefighting foam with GLDA suffered from the disadvan-
近年来,世界范围内频繁发生大规模森林火灾,每年有6万至14万公里的森林消失。森林火灾及其产生的烟雾造成了人类生命和健康的损失,以及大面积森林植被、生物量和生态系统的损失。欧洲地中海沿岸、北美西海岸、俄罗斯和澳大利亚的损失尤为严重。2007年6月至10月,希腊全国共发生了170多起大规模森林火灾。此外,2007年10月20日至23日在北美南加州爆发的森林大火,面积几乎相当于东京(2187公里),在截至10月27日的7天时间里,烧毁了约2000公里的森林和约1700所房屋(Hayasaka, 2010)。在这些森林火灾中,灭火泡沫的使用大大提高了灭火效果。灭火泡沫中的表面活性剂显著降低了水中的表面张力,使水能够有效地附着在可燃材料上,并使水能够渗透到可燃材料中。正因为如此,它通过增加冷却效果、抑制供氧、抑制可燃材料中的化学反应、阻挡辐射热等,在消防工作中非常有效。然而,对于森林火灾,在灭火活动中通常只使用水。这是因为山区也是城市居民的水源,消防泡沫流入河流和周围环境所造成的污染将特别令人担忧。人们对灭火泡沫的使用采取了谨慎的态度,甚至在美国,因此,有一种情况是,由于担心灭火泡沫对环境造成二次破坏,导致火灾自然熄灭,导致大面积的新旧森林遭到破坏。我们一直在开发以天然脂肪酸盐(肥皂)为主要成分的消防泡沫。与河流、湖泊和海洋中的环境水合成洗涤剂相比,这种肥皂对水生生物的毒性要低得多(Lin等人,2006;Kawano et al., 2007;Goto et al., 2007;2008;Kawano et al., 2014)。肥皂之所以对水生微生物和鱼类的毒性较低,是因为它与环境中存在的钙离子等金属离子发生反应,形成金属肥皂。金属皂不具有界面活性,毒性明显较低。最好使用对水生生物毒性非常低的肥皂,因为蔓延的灭火剂可能对自然环境产生很大的影响。肥皂基消防泡沫用环境用水稀释1wt %。环境水中的钙离子等金属离子可引起金属皂的形成,使界面活性降低。因此,有必要在消防泡沫中加入螯合剂,防止肥皂与金属离子形成金属皂。乙二胺四乙酸(EDTA)是常用的螯合剂,对金属离子有很好的遮蔽作用。然而,EDTA的可生物降解性差得多,其在环境中的长期残留,特别是作为重金属复合物,引起了对生态毒性的担忧(Oviedo等人,2003)。因此,高度可生物降解的螯合剂l -谷氨酸N -二乙酸(GLDA)被用于一般建筑的消防泡沫中(Mizuki et al., 2007)。然而,含GLDA的消防泡沫却存在着不足之处