Foam Concentrate Storage & Shelf Life:
The Complete Maintenance Guide
📅 Updated March 2025
✍️ CA-FIRE Technical Team
| Foam Type | Model | Min Shelf Life | Storage Temp Range | Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFFF | S-3-AB / S-6-AB | 10 years | 0 °C to 45 °C | Low |
| AR-AFFF | AFFF/AR · S/AR types | 10 years | 0 °C to 45 °C | Moderate — viscosity sensitive |
| FFFP | 3%FP-10°C / 6%FP | 10 years* | −5 °C to 45 °C | High — protein degrades |
| High Expansion | YEG-3 / YEG-6 | 10 years | −15 °C to 45 °C | Low |
| Class A | MJABP | 10 years | −13 °C to 45 °C | Low |
| Synthetic S-Type | 3%S-8°C / 6%S-20°C | 10+ years | −3 / −15 °C to 45 °C | Very low — longest lasting |
- Why storage conditions matter
- Core storage requirements
- Shelf life by foam type
- NFPA 11 Annex C annual testing
- Signs of degraded concentrate
- What to do if concentrate fails testing
- Bladder tank storage considerations
- Drum & IBC storage best practice
- The mixing contamination risk
- Replacement planning & ordering
Why Foam Concentrate Storage Conditions Matter
Core Storage Requirements — All Foam Types
Shelf Life by Foam Concentrate Type
AFFF is a wholly synthetic foam — no protein components — which makes it the most thermally stable of all fluorosurfactant foam types. Stored between 0°C and 45°C in sealed original containers away from direct sunlight, CA-FIRE S-3-AB and S-6-AB maintain performance well within GB 15308 and NFPA 11 acceptance criteria for a minimum of 10 years. In stable, temperature-controlled environments, AFFF frequently remains within specification beyond 10 years, though the 10-year mark is the guaranteed minimum and annual testing should still be conducted.
Key degradation risk: Temperature extremes — sustained storage above 40°C or freeze-thaw cycling
AR-AFFF contains a polysaccharide polymer that provides alcohol resistance. This polymer is stable under correct storage conditions, but is more sensitive to temperature extremes than the base surfactant system. Extended storage above 40°C or repeated freeze-thaw cycling can gradually degrade the polymer chain length, reducing its effectiveness at forming the protective gel membrane on polar solvent fires. Minimum shelf life is 10 years under correct conditions. Annual viscosity and expansion ratio testing is particularly important for AR-AFFF to catch polymer degradation before it becomes critical.
Key degradation risk: Polymer breakdown from temperature extremes — check viscosity annually
FFFP contains a protein-based foam matrix — the source of its excellent burnback resistance and oil-shedding properties, but also the reason it is the most storage-sensitive concentrate type. Protein foam is susceptible to biological degradation (microbial action on the protein base), thermal denaturation at high temperatures, and freeze-thaw damage. Degradation is indicated by an increasingly unpleasant odour (from microbial activity), sediment formation, pH drift outside 6.5–9.0, and reduced drainage time. Guaranteed minimum shelf life is 10 years under ideal conditions — but FFFP stored in fluctuating temperature environments or with any water ingress will typically degrade faster than synthetic types. Annual testing is non-negotiable for FFFP.
Key degradation risks: Microbial growth from water ingress; protein denaturation above 40°C; sediment from freeze-thaw
Synthetic-based high expansion foam concentrate is thermally stable and has low storage sensitivity. The −20°C freeze point provides a good safety margin for cold-climate installations. YEG-3 and YEG-6 stored between −15°C and 45°C in sealed containers maintain performance within specification for a minimum of 10 years. The main risk is temperature exceedance on hot outdoor installations — ensure storage tanks are shaded or insulated in high-ambient-temperature climates.
Key degradation risk: Sustained high temperature — shade outdoor storage tanks above 35°C ambient
Class A foam concentrate MJABP is a hydrocarbon-surfactant wetting agent with low storage sensitivity. It is PFAS-free and contains no protein components, making it resistant to microbial degradation. Stored between −13°C and 45°C in sealed containers, MJABP maintains performance for a minimum of 10 years. Partial use from opened containers should be minimised — reseal immediately and use remaining concentrate within 12 months of opening.
Key degradation risk: Opened container exposure to air — reseal and use promptly after opening
Synthetic S-type concentrate has the lowest storage sensitivity of all foam types — no protein components, no polymer additives, pure hydrocarbon surfactant chemistry. In stable, temperature-controlled environments, S-type frequently remains within performance specification well beyond 10 years. The 6%S-20°C model’s −20°C freeze point makes it particularly suitable for cold storage environments where freeze-thaw risk exists. This extended effective shelf life is one of the key practical advantages of S-type over protein-based FFFP for long-life installed systems.
Key degradation risk: Very low — most temperature-stable foam concentrate type available
NFPA 11 Annex C — Annual In-Service Testing Requirements
| Test Parameter | Method | Acceptance Criterion | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expansion ratio | Mix at specified % and aspirate through standard branch — measure foam volume vs solution volume | Within ±15% of original specification (typically 6.0–9.0 for low-exp types) | Indicates surfactant activity and foam stability — key indicator of overall concentrate health |
| 25% drainage time | Measure time for 25% of foam solution to drain from a standard foam sample at 20°C | Within ±25% of original specification | Measures foam stability — faster drainage indicates degraded foam stabilisers, shorter blanket life |
| pH value | Calibrated pH meter on undiluted concentrate at 20°C | Within specified range (typically 6.0–9.0) | pH shift indicates chemical decomposition or contamination — acidic shift common in degraded protein foams |
| Sediment & appearance | Visual inspection of concentrate sample — clarity, colour, sediment level, odour | No significant sediment or phase separation; colour consistent with original | Sediment indicates biological degradation (protein foams) or surfactant precipitation (synthetic) |
| Spread coefficient (AFFF / FFFP only) | Measure surface tension of foam solution — verify below fuel surface tension for film formation | Positive spread coefficient on n-heptane test fuel | Confirms aqueous film-forming ability is retained — critical for AFFF performance on hydrocarbon fires |
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Signs of Degraded Foam Concentrate
What to Do If Concentrate Fails Annual Testing
Bladder Tank Storage — Special Considerations
Drum & IBC Storage — Best Practice
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The Cross-Contamination Risk — Never Mix Foam Types
| What is being mixed | Risk | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| AFFF 3% + AFFF 6% (same type, different ratio) | Moderate — unknown concentration | Drain, flush, refill with correct single ratio |
| AFFF + AR-AFFF (same ratio) | High — polymer interaction | Drain, thorough flush, test before refill |
| AFFF + FFFP (synthetic + protein) | High — precipitation, performance loss | Drain, thorough flush, sanitise if protein contamination |
| Any foam type + water | High — dilution + microbial risk (protein) | Drain, investigate source of water ingress, flush and retest |