THERMAL SCIENCE

International Scientific Journal

Authors of this Paper

External Links

ESTIMATION OF COMBUSTION EFFICIENCY FOR CEILING VENTED COMPARTMENT FIRES USING ZONE MODEL CONCEPT

ABSTRACT
Combustion efficiency is difficult to measure or estimate for ceiling vented compartment fires because of the comprehensive interaction between vent flows and burning environment. Special phenomenons suggesting very poor burnings were observed in such limited ceiling vented compartment fires, like ghosting flames and oscillating flames. An estimation method for the combustion efficiencies of pool fires, which was important to characterize the incompleteness of the combustion, was established in the scope of zone models, and was validated using a sealed compartment fire case. In this method, oxygen concentrations, fuel mass loss rates can be also predicted based on temperature predictions. Small scale ceiling vented compartment pool fires were studied using this method. Temperature distributions, fuel mass loss rates and oxygen concentrations were compared in order to partially validate the mathematical model. The ventilation conditions of the poor fire were considered and quantified by introducing equivalence ratio. The present study may provide a practical way to understand the incomplete burning of such ceiling vented compartment fires.
KEYWORDS
PAPER SUBMITTED: 2017-04-23
PAPER REVISED: 2017-07-17
PAPER ACCEPTED: 2017-08-11
PUBLISHED ONLINE: 2017-09-09
DOI REFERENCE: https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI170423187Y
CITATION EXPORT: view in browser or download as text file
THERMAL SCIENCE YEAR 2019, VOLUME 23, ISSUE Issue 2, PAGES [929 - 939]
REFERENCES
  1. Chen, B., Experimental Study on Pool Fire Environment in Ship Room with Ceiling Vent, Ph. D. thesis, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, 2011 (in Chinese)
  2. He, Q. Z., Ventilation Effects of Critical Fire Behavior in Ceiling Vented Compartments, Ph. D. thesis, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, 2016 (in Chinese)
  3. Khan, M.M., et al., Combustion Characteristics of Materials and Generation of Fire Products, in: SFPE Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering (Ed. Hurley, M.J.), Springer, New York, USA, 2015, pp. 1143-1232
  4. Hamins, A., et al., Global Properties of Gaseous Pool Fires, Symposium (International) on Combustion, 26(1996), pp. 1429-1436
  5. Yang, J.C., et al., Estimate of the Effect of Scale on Radiative Heat Loss Fraction and Combustion Efficiency, Combust Science and Technology, 96(1994), pp. 183-188
  6. Tewarson, A., Combustion Efficiency and Its Radiative Component, Fire Safety Journal, 39(2004), pp. 131-141
  7. Tewarson, A., et al., Ventilation-Controlled Combustion of Polymers, Combustion and Flame, 95(1995), pp. 151-169
  8. Takeda, H., Mixing Effect and Combustion Efficiency in Compartment Fires, Fire Safety Journal, 5(1983), pp.199-204
  9. Rockett, J.A., Fire Induced Gas Flow in an Enclosure, Combust Science and Technology, 12(1976), pp. 165-175
  10. He, Q.Z., et al., Ventilation Limited Extinction of Fires in Ceiling Vented Compartments, International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 91(2015), pp. 570-583
  11. Utiskul, Y., et al., Compartment Fire Phenomena under Limited Ventilation, Fire Safety Journal, 40(2005), pp. 367-390
  12. Chen, X., et al., An Investigation of Horizontal Opening Effect on Pool Fire Behavior in a Confined Compartment: A Study based on Global Equivalence Ratio, Journal of Fire Science, 34(2015), pp. 13-29
  13. Pitts, W.M., The Global Equivalence Ratio Concept and the Formation Mechanisms of Carbon Monoxide in Enclosure Fires, Progress in Energy and Combustion Science, 21(1995), pp. 197-237
  14. Yuan, M., et al., Analysis of the Combustion Efficiencies and Heat Release Rates of Pool Fires in Ceiling Vented Compartments, Procedia Engineering, 62(2013), pp. 275-282
  15. Heskestad, G., Hamada, T., Ceiling Jets of Strong Fire Plumes, Fire Safety Journal, 21(1993), pp.69-82
  16. Rangwala, A.S., Mathematical Modeling of Low Ventilation Compartment Fires, Master Thesis, University of Maryland, Washington, USA, 2002
  17. Cooper, L.Y., Combined Buoyancy and Pressure-Driven Flow Through a Shallow, Horizontal, Circular Vent, Journal of Heat Transfer, 117(1995), pp. 659-667
  18. Epstein, M., Maximum Air Flow Rate into a Roof-vented Enclosure Fire, Journal of Heat Transfer, 2(1992), pp. 535-538
  19. Harish, R., Venkatasubbaiah K., Numerical Simulation of Turbulent Plume Spread in Ceiling Vented Enclosure, European Journal of Mechanics -B/ Fluids, 42(2013), pp. 142-158
  20. Venkatasubbaiah, K., Jaluria, Y., Numerical Simulation of Enclosure Fires with Horizontal Vents, Numerical Heat Transfer - Part A, 62(2012), pp. 179-196
  21. Chow, W.K., Gao, Y., Buoyancy and Inertial Force on Oscillations of Thermal-induced Convective Flow across a Vent, Building and Environment, 46(2011), pp. 315-323
  22. Zhang, J.Q., et al., Smoke Filling in Closed Compartments with Elevated Fire Sources, Fire Safe Journal, 54(2012), pp. 14-23
  23. Karlsson, B., Quintiere, J.G., Enclosure Fire Dynamics, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1999
  24. Kumar, R., Naveen, M., Compartment Fires: Cal Tree and Cross Ventilation, Combustion Science and Technology, 179(2007), pp : 1549-1567
  25. Yuan, M., et al., A Simplified Mathematical Model for Predicting the Vertical Temperature Profiles in Enclosure Fires without Vertical Opening, Fire Technology, 50(2014), pp. 929-943
  26. Li, C.H., Experimental Study on Pool Fire Behavior in Closed Compartemnt on Ship, Ph. D. thesis, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, 2010 (in Chinese)
  27. Chen, R. Y., et al., Correlation of Rate of Gas Temperature Rise with Mass Loss Rate in a Ceiling Vented Compartment. Science Bulletin, 59(2014), pp. 4559-4567
  28. Zhang, J.Q., et al., Impacts of Elevation on Pool Fire Behavior in a Closed Compartment: A Study based upon a Distinct Stratification Phenomenon, Journal of Fire Sciences, 31(2013), pp: 178-193
  29. Mowrer, F.W., Enclosure Smoke Filling Revisited, Fire Safety Journal, 33(1999), pp. 93-114

© 2024 Society of Thermal Engineers of Serbia. Published by the Vinča Institute of Nuclear Sciences, National Institute of the Republic of Serbia, Belgrade, Serbia. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International licence