Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires

A smoke explosion is generally considered as a deflagration of the accumulated unburned fuel inside a closed compartment. However, the term smoke explosion has been widely misused for decades with a great deal of confusion, and very little research has been done towards this topic. The purpose of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chen, Nick
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Civil and Natural Resources Engineering 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7830
id ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-7830
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-78302015-03-30T15:29:38ZSmoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment FiresChen, NickSmoke explosionCompartment FiresVentilation limitedBackdraftA smoke explosion is generally considered as a deflagration of the accumulated unburned fuel inside a closed compartment. However, the term smoke explosion has been widely misused for decades with a great deal of confusion, and very little research has been done towards this topic. The purpose of this research is to study the smoke explosion phenomenon in much more detail through the development of a fire scenario under various experimental conditions including ventilation size, fuel elevation and fuel mass, so that a more comprehensive understanding of this phenomenon can be achieved. A total of twenty experiments are carried out including both exploratory and final experiments. Thirteen experiments result in smoke explosions, among which there are five experiments result in more than one smoke explosion. A phenomenon referred as smoldering decay is observed in all experiments with smoke explosions, making it one of the precursors of the smoke explosion phenomenon. The smoldering decay is often indicated by an exponential decay of the temperature and is caused by the low oxygen concentration within the compartment. Based on the analysis, it is found that the vent size must be at least 50 mm in diameter in order for smoke explosions to occur. The fuel elevation has no influence on the occurrence of the smoke explosion. However when the fuel is placed near the ceiling, the temperature, the mass flow rate and the heat release rate are all lowered significantly. The size of the fuel also has no significant influence except for the duration of the experiment. The concentration of CO is scattered in the range of 1.9% and 4.3% when explosions occur. Hence, the accumulation of CO is considered not to be the direct cause for the smoke explosion. The triggering factor for smoke explosions is believed to be the flammable limit formed by the mixture of hydrocarbon and CO. The pressure difference caused by the explosion inside the compartment has to be at least 27 Pa for it to be considered as a smoke explosion.University of Canterbury. Civil and Natural Resources Engineering2013-06-11T03:27:51Z2013-06-11T03:27:51Z2012Electronic thesis or dissertationText1173-5996http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7830enNZCUCopyright Nick Chenhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Smoke explosion
Compartment Fires
Ventilation limited
Backdraft
spellingShingle Smoke explosion
Compartment Fires
Ventilation limited
Backdraft
Chen, Nick
Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
description A smoke explosion is generally considered as a deflagration of the accumulated unburned fuel inside a closed compartment. However, the term smoke explosion has been widely misused for decades with a great deal of confusion, and very little research has been done towards this topic. The purpose of this research is to study the smoke explosion phenomenon in much more detail through the development of a fire scenario under various experimental conditions including ventilation size, fuel elevation and fuel mass, so that a more comprehensive understanding of this phenomenon can be achieved. A total of twenty experiments are carried out including both exploratory and final experiments. Thirteen experiments result in smoke explosions, among which there are five experiments result in more than one smoke explosion. A phenomenon referred as smoldering decay is observed in all experiments with smoke explosions, making it one of the precursors of the smoke explosion phenomenon. The smoldering decay is often indicated by an exponential decay of the temperature and is caused by the low oxygen concentration within the compartment. Based on the analysis, it is found that the vent size must be at least 50 mm in diameter in order for smoke explosions to occur. The fuel elevation has no influence on the occurrence of the smoke explosion. However when the fuel is placed near the ceiling, the temperature, the mass flow rate and the heat release rate are all lowered significantly. The size of the fuel also has no significant influence except for the duration of the experiment. The concentration of CO is scattered in the range of 1.9% and 4.3% when explosions occur. Hence, the accumulation of CO is considered not to be the direct cause for the smoke explosion. The triggering factor for smoke explosions is believed to be the flammable limit formed by the mixture of hydrocarbon and CO. The pressure difference caused by the explosion inside the compartment has to be at least 27 Pa for it to be considered as a smoke explosion.
author Chen, Nick
author_facet Chen, Nick
author_sort Chen, Nick
title Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
title_short Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
title_full Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
title_fullStr Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
title_full_unstemmed Smoke Explosion in Severally Ventilation Limited Compartment Fires
title_sort smoke explosion in severally ventilation limited compartment fires
publisher University of Canterbury. Civil and Natural Resources Engineering
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7830
work_keys_str_mv AT chennick smokeexplosioninseverallyventilationlimitedcompartmentfires
_version_ 1716798964420837376