The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases
<p>The majority of deaths and injuries in compartment fires result from inhalation of the toxic gas, carron monoxide (CO), especially in locations remote from the burning compartment. This causes the transport and oxidation of CO in burning buildings to become an important topic. Studies have...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-461132021-05-26T05:48:23Z The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases Ewens, David S. Mechanical Engineering Vandsburger, Uri Roby, Richard J. Roe, Larry A. LD5655.V855 1994.E948 Carbon monoxide Fire Waste gases <p>The majority of deaths and injuries in compartment fires result from inhalation of the toxic gas, carron monoxide (CO), especially in locations remote from the burning compartment. This causes the transport and oxidation of CO in burning buildings to become an important topic. Studies have been conducted to determine the toxic environments produced inside, and in locations remote from, a burning compartment; however, no studies have investigated the composition of the exhaust gases during transport to remote locations. The goal of this study was to investigate fire exhaust gas transport through a hallway to determine the important parameters affecting the efficiency of sustained external burning in oxidizing toxic gases, including the hydrodynamic effects of different hallway configurations.</p> <p> Underventilated compartment fire experiments were petformed with a compartment exhausting along the axis of a hallway. The design of the compartment allowed direct measurement of the global equivalence ratio which was used as a main correlating parameter. Characteristic global equivalence ratios and an ignition index concept were investigated to determine when sustained external burning would occur. Gas sampling was petfonned downstream of the hallway to determine the overall efficiency of sustained external burning, and in the hallway to provide detailed data on the processes occurring in the hallway.</p> <p> The oxidation of the exhaust gases traveling through the hallway was determined to vary among different species, and also to be very sensitive to the hydrodynamic mixing between the rich exhaust plume and the cooler ambient air in the hallway. In general, the overall oxidation of hydrocarbons was much more complete than for CO or soot. The gas temperatures in the hallway and fuel vaporization rate were also detennined to affect oxidation in the hallway. Variations in the hallway inlet and exit soffits affected the hydrodynamic structure of the exhaust plume and oxidation efficiencies, with the inlet soffit exhibiting the strongest effect.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:51:00Z 2014-03-14T21:51:00Z 1994-02-15 2009-12-04 2009-12-04 2009-12-04 Thesis Text etd-12042009-020312 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46113 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-12042009-020312/ en OCLC# 30506080 LD5655.V855_1994.E948.pdf xii, 134 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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LD5655.V855 1994.E948 Carbon monoxide Fire Waste gases Ewens, David S. The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
description |
<p>The majority of deaths and injuries in compartment fires result from inhalation of
the toxic gas, carron monoxide (CO), especially in locations remote from the burning
compartment. This causes the transport and oxidation of CO in burning buildings to
become an important topic. Studies have been conducted to determine the toxic
environments produced inside, and in locations remote from, a burning compartment;
however, no studies have investigated the composition of the exhaust gases during
transport to remote locations. The goal of this study was to investigate fire exhaust gas
transport through a hallway to determine the important parameters affecting the efficiency
of sustained external burning in oxidizing toxic gases, including the hydrodynamic effects
of different hallway configurations.</p>
<p>
Underventilated compartment fire experiments were petformed with a
compartment exhausting along the axis of a hallway. The design of the compartment
allowed direct measurement of the global equivalence ratio which was used as a main
correlating parameter. Characteristic global equivalence ratios and an ignition index
concept were investigated to determine when sustained external burning would occur.
Gas sampling was petfonned downstream of the hallway to determine the overall efficiency of sustained external burning, and in the hallway to provide detailed data on the
processes occurring in the hallway.</p>
<p>
The oxidation of the exhaust gases traveling through the hallway was determined
to vary among different species, and also to be very sensitive to the hydrodynamic mixing
between the rich exhaust plume and the cooler ambient air in the hallway. In general, the
overall oxidation of hydrocarbons was much more complete than for CO or soot. The gas
temperatures in the hallway and fuel vaporization rate were also detennined to affect
oxidation in the hallway. Variations in the hallway inlet and exit soffits affected the
hydrodynamic structure of the exhaust plume and oxidation efficiencies, with the inlet
soffit exhibiting the strongest effect.</p> === Master of Science |
author2 |
Mechanical Engineering |
author_facet |
Mechanical Engineering Ewens, David S. |
author |
Ewens, David S. |
author_sort |
Ewens, David S. |
title |
The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
title_short |
The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
title_full |
The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
title_fullStr |
The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
title_full_unstemmed |
The transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
title_sort |
transport and remote oxidation of compartment fire exhaust gases |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46113 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-12042009-020312/ |
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AT ewensdavids thetransportandremoteoxidationofcompartmentfireexhaustgases AT ewensdavids transportandremoteoxidationofcompartmentfireexhaustgases |
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