Chapter 41 - Fire: Basic Concepts
Chapter 41 - Fire: Basic Concepts
Franais
Chapter 41 - Fire
BASIC CONCEPTS
Dougal Drysdale
Basic Concepts
Combustible materials are all around us. Given the appropriate circumstances, they can be
made to burn by subjecting them to an ignition source which is capable of initiating a selfsustaining reaction. In this process, the fuel reacts with oxygen from the air to release
energy (heat), while being converted to products of combustion, some of which may be
harmful. The mechanisms of ignition and burning need to be clearly understood.
Most everyday fires involve solid materials (e.g., wood, wood products and synthetic
polymers), although gaseous and liquid fuels are not uncommon. A brief review of the
combustion of gases and liquids is desirable before some of the basic concepts are discussed.
Diffusion and premixed flames
A flammable gas (e.g., propane, C3H8) can be burned in two ways: a stream or jet of gas from
a pipe (cf. the simple Bunsen burner with the air inlet closed) can be ignited and will burn as
a diffusion flame in which burning occurs in those regions where gaseous fuel and air mix by
diffusive processes. Such a flame has a characteristic yellow luminosity, indicating the
presence of minute soot particles formed as a result of incomplete combustion. Some of these
will burn in the flame, but others will emerge from the flame tip to form smoke.
If the gas and air are intimately mixed before ignition, then premixed combustion will occur,
provided that the gas/air mixture lies within a range of concentrations bounded by the lower
and upper flammability limits (see table 41.1). Outside these limits, the mixture is nonflammable. (Note that a premixed flame is stabilized at the mouth of a Bunsen burner when
the air inlet is open.) If a mixture is flammable, then it can be ignited by a small ignition
source, such as an electrical spark. The stoichiometric mixture is the most readily ignited, in
which the amount of oxygen present is in the correct proportion to burn all the fuel to carbon
dioxide and water (see accompanying equation, below, in which nitrogen can be seen to be
present in the same proportion as in air but does not take part in the reaction). Propane (C3H8)
is the combustible material in this reaction:
C3H8 + 5O2 + 18.8N2 = 3CO2 + 4H2O + 18.8N2
Table 41.1 Lower and upper flammability limits in air
Lower flammability
limit (% by volume)
Upper flammability
limit (% by volume)
Carbon
monoxide
12.5
74
Methane
5.0
15
Propane
2.1
9.5
n-Hexane
1.2
7.4
n-Decane
0.75
5.6
Methanol
6.7
36
Ethanol
3.3
19
Acetone
2.6
13
Benzene
1.3
7.9
diffusion flame (figure 41.1). Flames can be extinguished by interfering with this process in a
number of ways (see below).
Figure 41.1 Schematic representation of a burning surface showing the heat and mass
transfer processes
Heat transfer
An understanding of heat (or energy) transfer is the key to an understanding of fire behaviour
and fire processes. The subject deserves careful study. There are many excellent texts to
which one may turn (Welty, Wilson and Wicks 1976; DiNenno 1988), but for the present
purposes it is necessary only to draw attention to the three mechanisms: conduction,
convection and radiation. The basic equations for steady-state heat transfer (
Conduction:
Convection:
) are:
Radiation:
Conduction is relevant to heat transfer through solids; (k is a material property known as
thermal conductivity (kW/mK ) and l is the distance (m) over which the temperature falls
from T1 to T2 (in degrees Kelvin). Convection in this context refers to the transfer of heat
from a fluid (in this case, air, flames or fire products) to a surface (solid or liquid); h is the
convective heat transfer coefficient kW/m2K) and depends on the configuration of the surface
and nature of the flow of fluid past that surface. Radiation is similar to visible light (but with
a longer wavelength) and requires no intervening medium (it can traverse a vacuum); is the
emissivity (efficiency by which a surface can radiate), is the Stefan-Boltzman constant
(56.7 x 10-12 kW/m2K4). Thermal radiation travels at the speed of light (3 x 108 m/s) and an
intervening solid object will cast a shadow.
Rate of burning and rate of heat release
Heat transfer from flames to the surface of condensed fuels (liquids and solids) involves a
mixture of convection and radiation, although the latter dominates when the effective
diameter of the fire exceeds 1 m. The rate of burning (m, (g/s)) can be expressed by the
formula:
surface (e.g., by radiation, and by conduction through the solid) expressed as a flux (kW/m2);
Afuel is the surface area of the fuel (m2); and Lv is the heat of gasification (equivalent to the
latent heat of evaporation for a liquid) (kJ/g). If a fire develops in a confined space, the hot
smoky gases rising from the fire (driven by buoyancy) are deflected beneath the ceiling,
heating the upper surfaces. The resulting smoke layer and the hot surfaces radiate down to the
lower part of the enclosure, in particular to the fuel surface, thus increasing the rate of
burning:
where
is the extra heat supplied by radiation from the upper part of the enclosure
2
(kW/m ). This additional feedback leads to greatly enhanced rates of burning and to the
phenomenon of flashover in enclosed spaces where there is an adequate supply of air and
sufficient fuel to sustain the fire (Drysdale 1985).
The rate of burning is moderated by the magnitude of the value of Lv, the heat of gasification.
This tends to be low for liquids and relatively high for solids. Consequently, solids tend to
burn much more slowly than liquids.
It has been argued that the most important single parameter which determines the fire
behaviour of a material (or assembly of materials) is the rate of heat release (RHR) which is
coupled to the rate of burning through the equation:
where Hc is the effective heat of combustion of the fuel (kJ/g). New techniques are now
available for measuring the RHR at different heat fluxes (e.g., the Cone Calorimeter), and it is
now possible to measure the RHR of large items, such as upholstered furniture and wall
linings in large-scale calorimeters which use oxygen consumption measurements to
determine the rate of heat release (Babrauskas and Grayson 1992).
It should be noted that as a fire grows in size, not only does the rate of heat release increase,
but the rate of production of fire products also increases. These contain toxic and noxious
species as well as particulate smoke, the yields of which will increase when a fire developing
in a building enclosure becomes underventilated.
Ignition
Ignition of a liquid or solid involves raising the surface temperature until vapours are being
evolved at a rate sufficient to support a flame after the vapours have been ignited. Liquid
fuels can be classified according to their flashpoints, the lowest temperature at which there is
a flammable vapour/air mixture at the surface (i.e., the vapour pressure corresponds to the
lower flammability limit). These can be measured using a standard apparatus, and typical
examples are given in table 41.2. A slightly higher temperature is required to produce a
sufficient flow of vapours to support a diffusion flame. This is known as the firepoint. For
combustible solids, the same concepts are valid, but higher temperatures are required as
chemical decomposition is involved. The firepoint is typically in excess of 300 C, depending
on the fuel. In general, flame-retarded materials have significantly higher firepoints (see table
41.2).
Table 41.2 Flashpoints and firepoints of liquid and solid fuels
Closed cup flashpoint1 Firepoint2 (C)
(C)
Gasoline (100 Octane) (l) 38
n-Decane (l)
46
61.5
n-Dodecane (l)
74
103
Polymethylmethacrylate
(s)
310
FR
377
polymethylmethacrylate
(s)
Polypropylene (s)
330
FR polypropylene (s)
397
Polystyrene (s)
367
FR polystyrene (s)
445
l = liquid; s = solid.
1
Liquids: by Cleveland open cup apparatus. Solids: Drysdale and Thomson (1994).
(Note that the results for the flame-retarded species refer to a heat flux of 37 kW/m2).
Ease of ignition of a solid material is therefore dependent on the ease with which its surface
temperature can be raised to the firepoint, e.g., by exposure to radiant heat or to a flow of hot
gases. This is less dependent on the chemistry of the decomposition process than on the
thickness and physical properties of the solid, namely, its thermal conductivity (k), density ()
and heat capacity (c). Thin solids, such as wood shavings (and all thin sections), can be
ignited very easily because they have a low thermal mass, that is, relatively little heat is
required to raise the temperature to the firepoint. However, when heat is transferred to the
surface of a thick solid, some will be conducted from the surface into the body of the solid,
thus moderating the temperature rise of the surface. It can be shown theoretically that the rate
of rise of the surface temperature is determined by the thermal inertia of the material, that is,
the product kc. This is borne out in practice, since thick materials with a high thermal inertia
(e.g., oak, solid polyurethane) will take a long time to ignite under a given heat flux, whereas
under identical conditions thick materials with a low thermal inertia (e.g., fibre insulating
board, polyurethane foam) will ignite quickly (Drysdale 1985).
Ignition sources
Ignition is illustrated schematically in figure 41.2 (piloted ignition). For successful ignition,
an ignition source must be capable not only of raising the surface temperature to the firepoint,
or above, but it must also cause the vapours to ignite. An impinging flame will act in both
capacities, but an imposed radiative flux from a remote source may lead to the evolution of
vapours at a temperature above the firepoint, without the vapours igniting. However, if the
evolved vapours are hot enough (which requires the surface temperature to be much higher
than the firepoint), they may ignite spontaneously as they mix with air. This process is known
as spontaneous ignition.
Figure 41.2 The scenario for piloted ignition
A large number of ignition sources can be identified, but they have one thing in common,
which is that they are the result of some form of carelessness or inaction. A typical list would
include naked flames, smokers materials, frictional heating, electrical devices (heaters,
irons, cookers, etc.) and so on. An excellent survey may be found in Cote (1991). Some of
these are summarized in table 41.3 .
Table 41.3 Ignition sources
Examples
Electric heaters, hair dryers, electric
Electrically powered equipment
blankets, etc.
Open flame source
Match, cigarette lighter, blow torch, etc.
Gas-fuelled equipment
Gas fire, space heater, cooker, etc.
Other fuelled equipment
Wood stove, etc.
Lighted tobacco product
Cigar, pipe, etc.
Hot object
Hot pipes, mechanical sparks, etc.
Exposure to heating
Adjacent fire, etc.
Spontaneous heating
Linseed oil-soaked rags, coal piles, etc.
Rare-e.g., potassium permanganate with
Chemical reaction
glycerol
It should be noted that smouldering cigarettes cannot initiate flaming combustion directly
(even in common gaseous fuels), but can cause smouldering in materials which have the
propensity to undergo this type of combustion. This is observed only with materials which
char on heating. Smouldering involves the surface oxidation of the char, which generates
enough heat locally to produce fresh char from adjacent unburnt fuel. It is a very slow
process, but may eventually undergo a transition to flaming. Thereafter, the fire will develop
very rapidly.
Materials which have the propensity to smoulder can also exhibit the phenomenon of selfheating (Bowes 1984). This arises when such a material is stored in large quantities and in
such a way that heat generated by slow surface oxidation cannot escape, leading to a rise in
temperature within the mass. If the conditions are right, this can lead to a runaway process
ultimately developing into a smouldering reaction at depth within the material.
Flame spread
A major component in the growth of any fire is the rate at which flame will spread over
adjacent combustible surfaces. Flame spread can be modelled as an advancing ignition front
in which the leading edge of the flame acts as an ignition source for the fuel that is not yet
burning. The rate of spread is determined partly by the same material properties that control
the ease of ignition and partly by the interaction between the existing flame and the surface
ahead of the front. Upward, vertical spread is the most rapid as buoyancy ensures that the
flames flow upwards, exposing the surface above the burning area to direct heat transfer from
the flames. This should be contrasted with spread over a horizontal surface when the flames
from the burning area rise vertically, away from the surface. Indeed, it is common experience
that vertical spread is the most hazardous (e.g., flame spread on curtains and drapes and on
loose clothing such as dresses and nightgowns).
The rate of spread is also affected by an imposed radiant heat flux. In the development of a
fire in a room, the area of the fire will grow more rapidly under the increasing level of
radiation that builds up as the fire progresses. This will contribute to the acceleration of fire
growth that is characteristic of flashover.
Fire extinction and suppression can be examined in terms of the above outline of the theory
of fire. The gas phase combustion processes (i.e., the flame reactions) are very sensitive to
chemical inhibitors. Some of the flame retardants used to improve the fire properties of
materials rely on the fact that small amounts of inhibitor released with the fuel vapours will
suppress the establishment of flame. The presence of a flame retardant cannot render a
combustible material non-combustible, but it can make ignition more difficultperhaps
preventing ignition altogether provided that the ignition source is small. However, if a flameretarded material becomes involved in an existing fire, it will burn as the high heat fluxes
overwhelm the effect of the retardant.
Extinction of a fire may be achieved in a number of ways:
1.
2.
3.
4.
blow-out.
tackle the entire range of liquid fires that may be encountered. One of these, aqueous filmforming foam (AFFF), is an all-purpose foam which also produces a film of water on the
surface of the liquid fuel, thus increasing its effectiveness.
Quenching the flame
This method makes use of chemical suppressants to extinguish the flame. The reactions
which occur in the flame involve free radicals, a highly reactive species which have only a
fleeting existence but are continuously regenerated by a branched chain process that
maintains high enough concentrations to allow the overall reaction (e.g., an R1 type reaction)
to proceed at a fast rate. Chemical suppressants applied in sufficient quantity will cause a
dramatic fall in the concentration of these radicals, effectively quenching the flame. The most
common agents that operate in this way are the halons and dry powders.
Halons react in the flame to generate other intermediate species with which the flame radicals
react preferentially. Relatively small amounts of the halons are required to extinguish a fire,
and for this reason they were traditionally considered highly desirable; extinguishing
concentrations are breathable (although the products generated while passing through the
flame are noxious). Dry powders act in a similar fashion, but under certain circumstances are
much more effective. Fine particles are dispersed into the flame and cause termination of the
radical chains. It is important that the particles are small and numerous. This is achieved by
the manufacturers of many proprietary brands of dry powders by selecting a powder that
decrepitates, that is, the particles fragment into smaller particles when they are exposed to
the high temperatures of the flame.
For a person whose clothing has caught fire, a dry powder extinguisher is recognized as the
best method to control flames and to protect that individual. Rapid intervention gives rapid
knockdown, thus minimizing injury. However, the flame must be completely extinguished
because the particles quickly fall to the ground and any residual flaming will quickly regain
hold. Similarly, halons will only remain effective if the local concentrations are maintained. If
it is applied out of doors, the halon vapour rapidly disperses, and once again the fire will
rapidly re-establish itself if there is any residual flame. More significantly, the loss of the
suppressant will be followed by re-ignition of the fuel if the surface temperatures are high
enough. Neither halons nor dry powders have any significant cooling effect on the fuel
surface.
Removing the supply of air
The following description is an oversimplification of the process. While removing the
supply of air will certainly cause the fire to extinguish, to do this it is only necessary to
reduce the oxygen concentration below a critical level. The well-known oxygen index test
classifies combustible materials according to the minimum oxygen concentration in an
oxygen/nitrogen mixture that will just support flaming. Many common materials will burn at
oxygen concentrations down to approximately 14% at ambient temperatures (ca. 20 C) and
in the absence of any imposed heat transfer. The critical concentration is temperature
dependent, decreasing as the temperature is increased. Thus, a fire that has been burning for
some time will be capable of supporting flames at concentrations perhaps as low as 7%. A
fire in a room may be held in check and may even self-extinguish if the supply of oxygen is
limited by keeping doors and windows closed. Flaming may cease, but smouldering will
continue at very much lower oxygen concentrations. Admission of air by opening a door or
breaking a window before the room has cooled sufficiently can lead to a vigorous eruption of
the fire, known as backdraught, or backdraft.
Removal of air is difficult to achieve. However, an atmosphere may be rendered inert by
total flooding by means of a gas which will not support combustion, such as nitrogen, carbon
dioxide or gases from a combustion process (e.g., a ships engines) which are low in oxygen
and high in carbon dioxide. This technique can only be used in enclosed spaces as it is
necessary to maintain the required concentration of the inert gas until either the fire has
extinguished completely or fire-fighting operations can begin. Total flooding has special
applications, such as for ships holds and rare book collections in libraries. The required
minimum concentrations of the inert gases are shown in table 41.4 . These are based on the
assumption that the fire is detected at an early stage and that the flooding is carried out before
too much heat has accumulated in the space.
Table 41.4 Comparison of concentrations of different gases required for inerting
Agent
Halon 1301
Halon 1211
Nitrogen
Carbon dioxide
Removal of air can be effected in the immediate vicinity of a small fire by local application
of a suppressant from an extinguisher. Carbon dioxide is the only gas that is used in this way.
However, as this gas quickly disperses, it is essential to extinguish all flaming during the
attack on the fire; otherwise, flaming will re-establish itself. Re-ignition is also possible
because carbon dioxide has little if any cooling effect. It is worth noting that a fine water
spray entrained into a flame can cause extinction as the combined result of evaporation of the
droplets (which cools the burning zone) and reduction of the oxygen concentration by
dilution by water vapour (which acts in the same way as carbon dioxide). Fine water sprays
and mists are being considered as possible replacements for halons.
It is appropriate to mention here that it is inadvisable to extinguish a gas flame unless the gas
flow can be stopped immediately thereafter. Otherwise, a substantial volume of flammable
gas may build up and subsequently ignite, with potentially serious consequences.
Blow-out
This method is included here for completeness. A match flame can easily be blown out by
increasing the air velocity above a critical value in the vicinity of the flame. The mechanism
operates by destabilizing the flame in the vicinity of the fuel. In principle, larger fires can be
controlled in the same way, but explosive charges are normally required to generate sufficient
velocities. Oil well fires can be extinguished in this manner.
Finally, a common feature that needs to be emphasized is that the ease with which a fire can
be extinguished decreases rapidly as the fire increases in size. Early detection permits
extinction with minimal quantities of suppressant, with reduced losses. In choosing a
suppressant system, one should take into account the potential rate of fire development and
what type of detection system is available.
Explosions
An explosion is characterized by the sudden release of energy, producing a shock wave, or
blast wave, that may be capable of causing remote damage. There are two distinct types of
sources, namely, the high explosive and the pressure burst. The high explosive is typified by
compounds such as trinitrotoluene (TNT) and cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine (RDX). These
compounds are highly exothermic species, decomposing to release substantial quantities of
energy. Although thermally stable (although some are less so and require desensitization to
make them safe to handle), they can be induced to detonate, with decomposition, propagating
at the velocity of sound through the solid. If the amount of energy released is high enough, a
blast wave will propagate from the source with the potential to do significant damage at a
distance.
By assessing remote damage, one can estimate the size of the explosion in terms of TNT
equivalent (normally in metric tons). This technique relies on the large amount of data that
has been gathered on the damage potential of TNT (much of it during wartime), and uses
empirical scaling laws which have been developed from studies of the damage caused by
known quantities of TNT.
In peacetime, high explosives are used in a variety of activities, including mining, quarrying
and major civil engineering works. Their presence on a site represents a particular hazard that
requires specific management. However, the other source of explosions can be equally
devastating, particularly if the hazard has not been recognized. Overpressures leading to
pressure bursts can be the result of chemical processes within plants or from purely physical
effects, as will occur if a vessel is heated externally, leading to overpressurization. The term
BLEVE (boiling liquid expanding vapour explosion) has its origins here, referring originally
to the failure of steam boilers. It is now also commonly used to describe the event in which a
pressure vessel containing a liquefied gas such as LPG (liquified petroleum gas) fails in a
fire, releasing the flammable contents, which then ignite to produce a fireball.
On the other hand, the overpressure may be caused internally by a chemical process. In the
process industries, self-heating can lead to a runaway reaction, generating high temperatures
and pressures capable of causing a pressure burst. However, the most common type of
explosion is caused by the ignition of a flammable gas/air mixture which is confined within
an item of a plant or indeed within any confining structure or enclosure. The prerequisite is
the formation of a flammable mixture, an occurrence which should be avoided by good
design and management. In the event of an accidental release, a flammable atmosphere will
exist wherever the concentration of the gas (or vapour) lies between the lower and upper
flammability limits (table 41.1). If an ignition source is introduced to one of these regions, a
premixed flame will propagate rapidly from the source, converting the fuel/air mixture into
combustion products at an elevated temperature. This can be as high as 2,100 K, indicating
that in a completely closed system initially at 300 K, an overpressure as high as 7 bars is
possible. Only specially designed pressure vessels are capable of containing such
overpressures. Ordinary buildings will fall unless protected by pressure relief panels or
bursting discs or by an explosion suppression system. Should a flammable mixture form
within a building, the subsequent explosion can cause significant structural damageperhaps
total destructionunless the explosion can vent to the outside through openings (e.g., the
failure of windows) created during the early stages of the explosion.
Explosions of this type are also associated with the ignition of dust suspensions in air (Palmer
1973). These are encountered when there is a substantial accumulation of explosible dust
which is dislodged from shelves, rafters and ledges within a building to form a cloud, which
is then exposed to an ignition source (e.g., in flour mills, grain elevators, etc.). The dust must
(obviously) be combustible, but not all combustible dusts are explosible at ambient
temperatures. Standard tests have been designed to determine whether a dust is explosible.
These can also be used to illustrate that explosible dusts exhibit explosibility limits, similar
in concept to the flammability limits of gases and vapours. In general, a dust explosion has
the potential to do a great deal of damage because the initial event may cause more dust to be
dislodged, forming an even greater dust cloud which will inevitably ignite, to produce an
even greater explosion.
Explosion venting, or explosion relief, will only operate successfully if the rate of
development of the explosion is relatively slow, such as associated with the propagation of a
premixed flame through a stationary flammable mixture or an explosible dust cloud.
Explosion venting is of no use if detonation is involved. The reason for this is that the
pressure relief openings have to be created at an early stage of the event when the pressure is
still relatively low. If a detonation occurs, the pressure rises too rapidly for relief to be
effective, and the enclosing vessel or item of a plant experiences very high internal pressures
which will lead to massive destruction. Detonation of a flammable gas mixture can occur if
the mixture is contained within a long pipe or duct. Under certain conditions, propagation of
the premixed flame will push the unburnt gas ahead of the flame front at a rate that will
increase turbulence, which in turn will increase the rate of propagation. This provides a
feedback loop which will cause the flame to accelerate until a shock wave is formed. This,
combined with the combustion process, is a detonation wave which can propagate at
velocities well in excess of 1,000 m/s. This may be compared with the fundamental burning
velocity of a stoichiometric propane/air mixture of 0.45 m/s. (This is the rate at which a flame
will propagate through a quiescent (i.e., non-turbulent) propane/air mixture.)
The importance of turbulence on the development of this type of explosion cannot be
underestimated. The successful operation of an explosion protection system relies on early
venting or early suppression. If the rate of development of the explosion is too fast, then the
protection system will not be effective, and unacceptable overpressures can be produced.
An alternative to explosion relief is explosion suppression. This type of protection requires
that the explosion is detected at a very early stage, as close to ignition as possible. The
detector is used to initiate the rapid release of a suppressant into the path of the propagating
flame, effectively arresting the explosion before the pressure has increased to an extent at
which the integrity of the enclosing boundaries is threatened. The halons have been
commonly used for this purpose, but as these are being phased out, attention is now being
paid to the use of high-pressure water-spray systems. This type of protection is very
expensive and has limited application as it can only be used in relatively small volumes
within which the suppressant can be distributed quickly and uniformly (e.g., ducts carrying
flammable vapour or explosible dusts).
2.
3. Increased use of portable and area heating equipment sharply increased home fires
involving heating equipment.
4. Incendiary and suspicious fires continued to decline from the 1970s peak, but
associated property damage stopped declining.
5. A large share of fire-fighter fatalities are attributed to heart attacks and activities away
from the fireground.
6.
US and Canadian fire death rates are amongst the highest of all the developed countries.
9.
The states of the Old South in the United States have the highest fire death rates.
10.
Such conclusions are, of course, country-specific, although there are some common trends.
Careful use of such data can provide the means of formulating sound policies regarding fire
safety in the community. However, it must be remembered that these are inevitably
reactive, rather than proactive. Proactive measures can only be introduced following a
detailed fire hazard assessment. Such a course of action has been introduced progressively,
starting in the nuclear industry and moving into the chemical, petrochemical and offshore
industries where the risks are much more easily defined than in other industries. Their
application to hotels and public buildings generally is much more difficult and requires the
application of fire modelling techniques to predict the course of a fire and how the fire
products will spread through the building to affect the occupants. Major advances have been
made in this type of modelling, although it must be said that there is a long way to go before
these techniques can be used with confidence. Fire safety engineering is still in need of much
basic research in fire safety science before reliable fire hazard assessment tools can be made
widely available.
Ignition requires favourable starting conditions, which are generally a sufficient heating
up of the system that covers the initial energy demand of the chain reaction of burning.
The resultant of the reactions are often exothermic, which means that during burning, heat
is released and this phenomenon is often accompanied by visibly observable flaming.
Ignition may be considered the first step of the self-sustaining process of combustion. It may
occur as piloted ignition (or forced ignition) if the phenomenon is caused by any outer
ignition source, or it may occur as auto ignition (or self ignition) if the phenomenon is the
result of reactions taking place in the combustible material itself and coupled with heat
release.
The inclination to ignition is characterized by an empirical parameter, the ignition
temperature (i.e., the lowest temperature, to be determined by test, to which the material has
to be heated to for ignition). Depending upon whether or not this parameter is determined
with special test methodsby the use of any ignition source, we distinguish between the
piloted ignition temperature and the auto ignition temperature.
In the case of piloted ignition, the energy required for the activation of the materials involved
in the burning reaction is supplied by ignition sources. However, there is no direct
relationship between the heat quantity needed for ignition and the ignition temperature,
because although the chemical composition of the components in the combustible system is
an essential parameter of ignition temperature, it is considerably influenced by the sizes and
shapes of materials, the pressure of the environment, conditions of air flow, parameters of
ignition source, the geometrical features of the testing device, etc. This is the reason for
which the data published in literature for autoignition temperature and piloted ignition
temperature can be significantly different.
The ignition mechanism of materials in different states may be simply illustrated. This
involves examining materials as either solids, liquids or gases.
Most solid materials take up energy from any outer ignition source either by conduction,
convection or radiation (mostly by their combination), or are heated up as a result of the heatproducing processes taking place internally that start decomposition on their surfaces.
For ignition to occur with liquids, these must have the formation of a vapour space above
their surface that is capable of burning. The vapours released and the gaseous decomposition
products mix with the air above the surface of liquid or solid material.
The turbulent flows that arise in the mixture and/or the diffusion help the oxygen to reach the
molecules, atoms and free radicals on and above the surface, which are already suitable for
reaction. The particles induced enter into interaction, resulting in the release of heat. The
process steadily accelerates, and as the chain reaction starts, the material comes to ignition
and burns.
The combustion in the layer under the surface of solid combustible materials is called
smouldering, and the burning reaction taking place on the interface of solid materials and gas
is called glowing. Burning with flames (or flaming) is the process in the course of which the
exothermic reaction of burning runs in the gas phase. This is typical for the combustion of
both liquid and solid materials.
Combustible gases burn naturally in the gas phase. It is an important empirical statement that
the mixtures of gases and air are capable of ignition in a certain range of concentration only.
This is valid also for the vapours of liquids. The lower and upper flammable limits of gases
and vapours depend on the temperature and pressure of the mixture, the ignition source and
the concentration of the inert gases in the mixture.
Ignition Sources
The phenomena supplying heat energy may be grouped into four fundamental categories as to
their origin (Sax 1979):
1. heat energy generated during chemical reactions (heat of oxidation, heat of combustion,
heat of solution, spontaneous heating, heat of decomposition, etc.)
2. electrical heat energy (resistance heating, induction heating, heat from arcing, electric
sparks, electrostatical discharges, heat generated by lightning stroke, etc.)
3.
4.
The following discussion addresses the most frequently encountered sources of ignition.
Open flames
Open flames may be the simplest and most frequently used ignition source. A large number of
tools in general use and various types of technological equipment operate with open flames,
or enable the formation of open flames. Burners, matches, furnaces, heating equipment,
flames of welding torches, broken gas and oil pipes, etc. may practically be considered
potential ignition sources. Because with an open flame the primary ignition source itself
represents an existing self-sustaining combustion, the ignition mechanism means in essence
the spreading of burning to another system. Provided that the ignition source with open flame
possesses sufficient energy for initiating ignition, burning will start.
Spontaneous ignition
The chemical reactions generating heat spontaneously imply the risk of ignition and burning
as internal ignition sources. The materials inclined to spontaneous heating and spontaneous
ignition may, however, become secondary ignition sources and give rise to ignition of the
combustible materials in the surroundings.
Although some gases (e.g., hydrogen phosphide, boron hydride, silicon hydride) and liquids
(e.g., metal carbonyls, organometallic compositions) are inclined to spontaneous ignition,
most spontaneous ignitions occur as surface reactions of solid materials. Spontaneous
ignition, like all ignitions, depends on the chemical structure of the material, but its
occurrence is determined by the grade of dispersity. The large specific surface enables the
local accumulation of reaction heat and contributes to the increase of temperature of material
above spontaneous ignition temperature.
Spontaneous ignition of liquids is also promoted if they come into contact with air on solid
materials of large specific surface area. Fats and especially unsaturated oils containing double
bonds, when absorbed by fibrous materials and their products, and when impregnated into
textiles of plant or animal origin, are inclined to spontaneous ignition under normal
atmospheric conditions. Spontaneous ignition of glass-wool and mineral-wool products
produced from non-combustible fibres or inorganic materials covering large specific surfaces
and contaminated by oil have caused very severe fire accidents.
Spontaneous ignition has been observed mainly with dusts of solid materials. For metals with
good heat conductivity, local heat accumulation needed for ignition necessitates very fine
crushing of metal. As the particle size decreases, the likelihood of spontaneous ignition
increases, and with some metal dusts (for example, iron) pyrophorosity ensues. When storing
and handling coal dust, soot of fine distribution, dusts of lacquers and synthetic resins, as well
as during the technological operations carried out with them, special attention should be
given to the preventive measures against fire to reduce the hazard of spontaneous ignition.
Materials inclined to spontaneous decomposition show special ability to ignite spontaneously.
Hydrazine, when set on any material with a large surface area, bursts into flames
immediately. The peroxides, which are widely used by the plastics industry, easily decompose
spontaneously, and as a consequence of decomposition, they become dangerous ignition
sources, occasionally initiating explosive burning.
The violent exothermic reaction that occurs when certain chemicals come into contact with
each other may be considered a special case of spontaneous ignition. Examples of such cases
are contact of concentrated sulphuric acid with all the organic combustible materials,
chlorates with sulphur or ammonium salts or acids, the organic halogen compounds with
alkali metals, etc. The feature of these materials to be unable to bear each other
(incompatible materials) requires special attention particularly when storing and co-storing
them and elaborating the regulations of fire-fighting.
It is worth mentioning that such hazardously high spontaneous heating may, in some cases, be
due to the wrong technological conditions (insufficient ventilation, low cooling capacity,
discrepancies of maintenance and cleaning, overheating of reaction, etc.), or promoted by
them.
Certain agricultural products, such as fibrous feedstuffs, oily seeds, germinating cereals, final
products of the processing industry (dried beetroot slices, fertilizers, etc.), show an inclination
for spontaneous ignition. The spontaneous heating of these materials has a special feature: the
dangerous temperature conditions of the systems are exacerbated by some exothermic
biological processes that cannot be controlled easily.
Electric ignition sources
Power machines, instruments and heating devices operated by electric energy, as well as the
equipment for power transformation and lighting, typically do not present any fire hazard to
their surroundings, provided that they have been installed in compliance with the relevant
regulations of safety and requirements of standards and that the associated technological
instructions have been observed during their operation. Regular maintenance and periodic
supervision considerably diminish the probability of fires and explosions. The most frequent
causes of fires in electric devices and wiring are overloading, short circuits, electric sparks
and high contact resistances.
Overloading exists when the wiring and electrical appliances are exposed to higher current
than that for which they are designed. The overcurrent passing through the wiring, devices
and equipment might lead to such an overheating that the overheated components of the
electrical system become damaged or broken, grow old or carbonize, resulting in cord and
cable coatings melting down, metal parts glowing and the combustible structural units
coming to ignition and, depending on the conditions, also spreading fire to the environment.
The most frequent cause of overloading is that the number of consumers connected is higher
than permitted or their capacity exceeds the value stipulated.
The working safety of electrical systems is most frequently endangered by short circuits.
They are always the consequences of any damage and occur when the parts of the electrical
wiring or the equipment at the same potential level or various potential levels, insulated from
each other and the earth, come into contact with each other or with the earth. This contact
may arise directly as metal-metal contact or indirectly, through electric arc. In cases of short
circuits, when some units of the electric system come in contact with each other, the
resistance will be considerably lower, and as a consequence, the intensity of current will be
extremely high, perhaps by several orders of magnitude higher. The heat energy released
during overcurrents with large short circuits might result in a fire in the device affected by the
short circuit, with the materials and equipment in the surrounding area coming to ignition and
with the fire spreading to the building.
Electric sparks are heat energy sources of a small nature, but as shown by experience, act
frequently as ignition sources. Under normal working conditions, most electrical appliances
do not release sparks, but the operation of certain devices is normally accompanied by sparks.
Sparking introduces a hazard foremost at places where, in the zone of their generation,
explosive concentrations of gas, vapour or dust might arise. Consequently, equipment
normally releasing sparks during operation is permitted to be set up only at places where the
sparks cannot give rise to fire. On its own, the energy content of sparks is insufficient for the
ignition of the materials in the environment or to initiate an explosion.
If an electrical system has no perfect metallic contact between the structural units through
which the current flows, high contact resistance will occur at this spot. This phenomenon is in
most cases due to the faulty construction of joints or to unworkmanlike installations. The
disengagement of joints during operation and natural wear may also be cause for high contact
resistance. A large portion of the current flowing through places with increased resistance will
transform to heat energy. If this energy cannot be dissipated sufficiently (and the reason
cannot be eliminated), the extremely large increase of temperature might lead to a fire
condition that endangers the surrounding.
If the devices work on the basis of the induction concept (engines, dynamos, transformers,
relays, etc.) and are not properly calculated, eddy currents may arise during operation. Due to
the eddy currents, the structural units (coils and their iron cores) might warm up, which might
lead to the ignition of insulating materials and the burning of the equipment. Eddy currents
might arisewith these harmful consequencesalso in the metal structural units around
high-voltage equipment.
Electrostatic sparks
Electrostatic charging is a process in the course of which any material, originally with electric
neutrality (and independent of any electric circuit) becomes charged positively or negatively.
This may occur in one of three ways:
1. charging with separation, such that charges of subtractive polarity accumulate on two
bodies simultaneously
2. charging with passing, such that the charges passing away leave charges of opposed
polarity signs behind
3.
charging by taking up, such that the body receives charges from outside.
These three ways of charging may arise from various physical processes, including separation
after contact, splitting, cutting, pulverizing, moving, rubbing, flowing of powders and fluids
in pipe, hitting, change of pressure, change of state, photoionization, heat ionization,
electrostatical distribution or high-voltage discharge.
Electrostatic charging may occur both on conducting bodies and insulating bodies as a result
of any of the processes mentioned above, but in most cases the mechanical processes are
responsible for the accumulation of the unwanted charges.
From the large number of the harmful effects and risks due to electrostatic charging and the
spark discharge resulting from it, two risks can be mentioned in particular: endangering of
electronic equipment (for example, computer for process control) and the hazard of fire and
explosion.
Electronic equipment is endangered first of all if the discharge energy from the charging is
sufficiently high to cause destruction of the input of any semi-conductive part. The
development of electronic units in the last decade has been followed by the rapid increase of
this risk.
The development of fire or explosion risk necessitates the coincidence in space and time of
two conditions: the presence of any combustible medium and the discharge with ability for
ignition. This hazard occurs mainly in the chemical industry. It may be estimated on the basis
of the so-called spark sensitivity of hazardous materials (minimum ignition energy) and
depends on the extent of charging.
It is an essential task to reduce these risks, namely, the large variety of consequences that
extend from technological troubles to catastrophes with fatal accidents. There are two means
of protecting against the consequences of electrostatic charging:
1. preventing the initiation of the charging process (it is evident, but usually very difficult
to realize)
2. restricting the accumulation of charges to prevent the occurrence of dangerous
discharges (or any other risk).
Wood is one of the most common materials in the human milieu. Houses, building structures,
furniture and consumer goods are made of wood, and it is also widely used for products such
as paper as well as in the chemical industry.
Wood and wood products are combustible, and when in contact with high-temperature
surfaces and exposed to heat radiation, open flames or any other ignition source, will
carbonize, glow, ignite or burn, depending upon the condition of combustion. To widen the
field of their application, the improvement of their combustion properties is required. In order
to make structural units produced from wood less combustible, they are typically treated with
fire-retardant agents (e.g., saturated, impregnated, provided with surface coating).
The most essential characteristic of combustibility of the various kinds of wood is the ignition
temperature. Its value strongly depends on some of the properties of wood and the test
conditions of determination, namely, the wood samples density, humidity, size and shape, as
well as the ignition source, time of exposure, intensity of exposure and the atmosphere during
testing. It is interesting to note that the ignition temperature as determined by various test
methods differs. Experience has shown that the inclination of clean and dry wood products to
ignition is extremely low, but several fire cases caused by spontaneous ignition have been
known to occur from storing dusty and oily waste wood in rooms with imperfect ventilation.
It has been proven empirically that higher moisture content increases the ignition temperature
and reduces the burning speed of wood. The thermal decomposition of wood is a complicated
process, but its phases may clearly be observed as follows:
The thermal decomposition with mass loss starts already in the range 120-200 C;
moisture content releases and the non-combustible degradates occur in the combustion space.
At 200-280 C, mainly endothermic reactions occur while the heat energy of ignition
source is taken up.
At 280-500 C, the exothermic reactions of decomposition products are steadily
accelerating as the primary process, while carbonization phenomena may be observed. In this
temperature range, sustaining combustion has already developed. After ignition, burning is
not steady in time because of the good heat-insulating ability of its carbonized layers.
Consequently, the warming up of the deeper layers is limited and time consuming. When the
surfacing of the combustible decomposition products is accelerated, burning will be
complete.
At temperatures exceeding 500 C, the wood char forms residues. During its additional
glowing, ash containing solid, inorganic materials is produced, and the process has come to
an end.
Fibres and textiles
The majority of the textiles produced from fibrous materials that are found in the close
surrounding of people is combustible. Clothing, furniture and the built environment partly or
totally consists of textiles. The hazard which they present exists during their production,
processing and storing as well as during their wearing.
The basic materials of textiles are both natural and artificial; synthetic fibres are used either
alone or mixed with natural fibres. The chemical composition of the natural fibres of plant
origin (cotton, hemp, jute, flax) is cellulose, which is combustible, and these fibres have a
relatively high ignition temperature (approx. 400 C). It is an advantageous feature of their
burning that when brought to high temperature they carbonize but do not melt. This is
especially advantageous for the medical treatments of burn casualties.
The fire hazardous properties of fibres of protein base of animal origin (wool, silk, hair) are
even more favourable than those of fibres of plant origin, because a higher temperature is
required for their ignition (500-600 C), and under the same conditions, their burning is less
intensive.
The plastics industry, utilizing several extremely good mechanical properties of polymer
products, has also gained prominence in the textile industry. Among the properties of acrylic,
polyester and the thermoplastic synthetic fibres (nylon, polypropylene, polyethylene), those
associated with burning are the least advantageous. Most of them, in spite of their high
ignition temperature (approx. 400-600 C), melt when exposed to heat, easily ignite, burn
intensively, drop or melt when burning and release considerably high quantities of smoke and
toxic gases. These burning properties may be improved by addition of natural fibres,
producing so-called textiles with mixed fibres. Further treatment is accomplished with flameretardant agents. For the manufacture of textiles for industrial purposes and heat-protective
clothing, inorganic, non-combustible fibre products (including glass and metal fibres) are
already used in large quantities.
The most important fire hazard characteristics of textiles are the properties connected with
ignitability, flame spread, heat generation and the toxic combustion products. Special testing
methods have been developed for their determination. The test results obtained influence the
fields of application for these products (tents and flats, furniture, vehicle upholstery, clothes,
carpets, curtains, special protective clothing against heat and weather), as well as the
stipulations to restrict the risks in their use. An essential task of industrial researchers is to
develop textiles that sustain high temperature, treated with fire-retardant agents, (heavily
combustible, with long ignition time, low flame spread rate, low speed of heat release) and
produce small amounts of toxic combustion products, as well as to improve the unfavourable
effect of fire accidents due to the burning of such materials.
Combustible and flammable liquids
In the presence of ignition sources, combustible and flammable liquids are potential sources
of risk. First, the closed or open vapour space above such liquids provides a fire and
explosion hazard. Combustion, and more frequently explosion, might occur if the material is
present in the vapour-air mixture in suitable concentration. From this it follows that burning
and explosion in the zone of combustible and flammable liquids may be prevented if:
Figure 41.3 Common types of tanks for storage of flammable and combustible liquids
In practice, a large number of material characteristics are known in connection with the
dangerous nature of combustible and flammable liquids. These are closed-cup and open-cup
flash points, boiling point, ignition temperature, rate of evaporation, upper and lower limits of
the concentration for combustibility (flammable or explosive limits), the relative density of
vapours compared to air and energy required for the ignition of vapours. These factors
provide full information about the sensitivity for ignition of various liquids.
Nearly all over the world the flash point, a parameter determined by standard test under
atmospherical conditions, is used as the basis to group the liquids (and materials behaving as
liquids at relatively low temperatures) into categories of risk. The safety requirements for
storage of liquids, their handling, the technological processes, and the electrical equipment to
be set up in their zone should be elaborated for each category of flammability and
combustibility. The zones of risk around the technological equipment should also be
identified for each category. Experience has shown that fire and explosion might occur
depending on the temperature and pressure of the systemwithin the range of concentration
between the two flammable limits.
Gases
Although all materialsunder a specific temperature and pressuremay become gases, the
materials considered gaseous in practice are those that are in a gas state at normal
temperature (~20 C) and normal atmospheric pressure (~100 kPa).
In respect to fire and explosion hazards, gases may be ranked in two main groups:
combustible and non-combustible gases. According to the definition accepted in practice,
combustible gases are those that burn in air with normal oxygen concentration, provided that
the conditions required for burning exist. Ignition only occurs above a certain temperature,
with the necessary ignition temperature, and within a given range of concentration.
Non-combustible gases are those that do not burn either in oxygen or in air with any
concentration of air. A portion of these gases support combustion (e.g., oxygen), while the
other portion inhibit burning. The non-combustible gases not supporting burning are called
inert gases (nitrogen, noble gases, carbon dioxide, etc.).
In order to achieve economic efficiency, the gases stored and transported in containers or
transporting vessels are typically in compressed, liquefied, or cooled-condensated (cryogenic)
state. Basically, there are two hazardous situations in connection with gases: when they are in
containers and when they are released from their containers.
For compressed gases in storage containers, external heat might considerably increase the
pressure within the container, and the extreme overpressure might lead to explosion. Gaseous
storage containers will typically include a vapour phase and a liquid phase. Because of
changes in pressure and temperature, the extension of the liquid phase gives rise to the further
compression of vapour space, while the vapour pressure of the liquid increases in proportion
with the increase of temperature. As a result of these processes, critically dangerous pressure
may be produced. Storage containers are generally required to contain the application of
overpressure relief devices. These are capable of mitigating a hazardous situation due to
higher temperatures.
If the storage vessels are insufficiently sealed, or damaged, the gas will flow out to the free
air space, mix with air and depending on its quantity and the way of its flowing, may cause
the formation of a large, explosive air space. The air around a leaking storage vessel can be
unsuitable for breathing and may be dangerous for people nearby, partly due to the toxic
effect of some gases and partly due to the diluted concentration of oxygen.
Bearing in mind the potential fire hazard due to gases and the need for safe operation, one
must get detailed knowledge of the following features of gases either stored or used,
especially for industrial consumers: the chemical and physical properties of gases, ignition
temperature, the lower and upper limits of concentration for flammability, the hazardous
parameters of the gas in the container, the risk factors of the hazardous situation caused by
the gases released into the open air, the extent of the necessary safety zones and the special
measures to be taken in case of a possible emergency situation connected with fire-fighting.
Chemicals
Knowledge of the hazardous parameters of chemicals is one of the basic conditions of safe
working. The preventive measures and requirements for protection against fire may be
elaborated only if the physical and chemical properties connected with fire hazard are taken
into consideration. Of these properties, the most important ones are the following:
combustibility; ignitability; ability to react with other materials, water or air; inclination to
corrosion; toxicity; and radioactivity.
Information on the properties of chemicals can be obtained from the technical data sheets
issued by manufacturers and from the manuals and handbooks containing the data of
hazardous chemicals. These provide users with information not only about the general
technical features of materials, but also about the actual values of hazard parameters
(decomposition temperature, ignition temperature, limit concentrations of combustion, etc.),
their special behaviour, requirements for storage and fire-fighting, as well as
recommendations for first aid and medical therapy.
The toxicity of chemicals, as potential fire hazard, may act in two ways. First, the high
toxicity of certain chemicals themselves, may be hazardous in a fire. Second, their presence
within the fire zone may effectively restrict fire-fighting operations.
The oxidizing agents (nitrates, chlorates, inorganic peroxides, permanganates, etc.), even if
they themselves are non-combustible, largely contribute to the ignition of combustible
materials and to their intensive, occasionally explosive burning.
The group of unstable materials includes the chemicals (acetaldehyde, ethylene oxide,
organic peroxides, hydrogen cyanide, vinyl chloride) which polymerize or decompose in
violent exothermic reactions spontaneously or very easily.
The materials sensitive to water and air are extremely dangerous. These materials (oxides,
hydroxides, hydrides, anhydrides, alkali metals, phosphorus, etc.) interact with the water and
air that are always present in the normal atmosphere, and start reactions accompanied by very
high heat generation. If they are combustible materials, they will come to spontaneous
ignition. However, the combustible components that initiate the burning may possibly
explode and spread to the combustible materials in the surrounding area.
The majority of corrosive materials (inorganic acidssulphuric acid, nitric acid, perchloric
acid, etc.and halogens fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine) are strong oxidizing agents,
but at the same time they have very strong destructive effects on living tissues, and therefore
special measures have to be taken for fire-fighting.
The dangerous characteristic of radioactive elements and compounds is increased by the fact
that the radiation emitted by them may be harmful in several ways, besides that such
materials may be fire hazards themselves. If in a fire the structural containment of the
radioactive objects involved becomes damaged, -radiating materials might be released. They
can have a very strong ionizing effect, and are capable of the fatal destruction of living
organisms. Nuclear accidents can be accompanied by fires, the decomposition products of
which bind radioactive (-and -radiating) contaminants by adsorption. These may cause
permanent injuries to the persons taking part in rescue operations if they penetrate into their
bodies. Such materials are extremely dangerous, because the persons affected do not perceive
any radiation by their sensing organs, and their general state of health does not seem to be
any worse. It is obvious that if radioactive materials burn, the radioactivity of the site, the
decomposition products and the water used for fire-fighting should be kept under constant
observation by means of radioactive signalling devices. The knowledge of these factors has to
be taken into account for the strategy of intervention and all additional operations. The
buildings for handling and storing radioactive materials as well as for their technological use
need to be built of non-combustible materials of high fire resistance. At the same time, highquality, automatic equipment for detecting, signalling and extinguishing a fire should be
provided.
Explosives and blasting agents
Explosive materials are used for many military and industrial purposes. These are chemicals
and mixtures which, when affected by strong mechanical force (hitting, shock, friction) or
starting ignition, suddenly transform to gases of large volume through an extremely rapid
oxidizing reaction (e.g., 1,000-10,000 m/s). The volume of these gases is the multiple of the
volume of the explosive material already exploded, and they will exert very high pressure on
the surroundings. During an explosion, high temperatures can arise (2,500-4,000 C) that
promote the ignition of the combustible materials in the zone of explosion.
Manufacture, transport and storage of the various explosive materials are governed by
rigorous requirements. An example is NFPA 495, Explosive Materials Code.
Besides the explosive materials used for military and industrial purposes, the inductive
blasting materials and pyrotechnical products are also treated as hazards. In general, mixtures
of explosive materials are often used (picric acid, nitroglycerin, hexogene, etc.), but mixtures
of materials capable of explosion are also in use (black powder, dynamite, ammonium nitrate,
etc.). In the course of acts of terrorism, plastic materials have become well-known, and are, in
essence, mixtures of brisant and plasticizing materials (various waxes, Vaseline, etc.).
For explosive materials, the most effective method of protection against fire is the exclusion
of ignition sources from the surroundings. Several explosive materials are sensitive to water
or various organic materials with an ability to oxidate. For these materials, the requirements
for the conditions of storage and the rules for storing in the same place together with other
materials should be carefully considered.
Metals
It is known from practice that nearly all the metals, under certain conditions, are capable of
burning in atmospheric air. Steel and aluminium in large structural thickness, on the basis of
their behaviour in fire, are clearly evaluated as non-combustible. However, the dusts of
aluminium, iron in fine distribution and metal cottons from thin metal fibres can easily be
ignited and thus burn intensively. The alkali metals (lithium, sodium, potassium), the
alkaline-earth metals (calcium, magnesium, zinc), zirconium, hafnium, titanium, etc. ignite
extremely easily in the form of a powder, filings or thin bands. Some metals have such a high
sensitivity that they are stored separately from air, in inert gas atmospheres or under a liquid
that is neutral for the metals.
The combustible metals and those that are conditioned to burn produce extremely violent
burning reactions that are high-speed oxidation processes releasing considerably higher
quantities of heat than observed from the burning of combustible and flammable liquids. The
burning of metal dust in the case of settled powder, following the preliminary phase of
glowing-ignition, might grow to rapid burning. With stirred-up dusts and clouds of dusts that
might result, severe explosions can occur. The burning activity and affinity for oxygen of
some metals (such as magnesium) are so high that after being ignited they will continue to
burn in certain media (e.g., nitrogen, carbon dioxide, steam atmosphere) that are used for
extinguishing fires derived from combustible solid materials and liquids.
Extinguishing metal fires presents a special task for fire-fighters. The choice of the proper
extinguishing agent and the process in which it is applied are of great importance.
Fires of metals may be controlled with very early detection, the rapid and appropriate action
of fire-fighters using the most effective method and, if possible, removal of metals and any
other combustible materials from the zone of burning or at least a reduction of their
quantities.
Special attention should be given to the protection against radiation when radioactive metals
(plutonium, uranium) burn. Preventive measures have to be taken to avoid the penetration of
toxic decomposition products into living organisms. For example, alkali metals, because of
their ability to react violently with water may be extinguished with dry fire-extinguishing
powders only. Burning of magnesium cannot be extinguished with water, carbon dioxide,
halons or nitrogen with good success, and more important, if these agents are used in firefighting, the hazardous situation will become even more severe. The only agents that can be
applied successfully are the noble gases or in some cases boron trifluoride.
Plastics and rubber
Plastics are macromolecular organic compounds produced synthetically or by modification of
natural materials. The structure and shape of these macromolecular materials, produced by
polymerizational, polyadditional or polycondensational reactions, will strongly influence
their properties. The chain molecules of thermoplastics (polyamides, polycarbonates,
polyesters, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, polymethyl-metacrylate, etc.) are linear or
branched, the elastomers (neoprene, polysulphides, isoprene, etc.) are lightly cross-linked,
while thermosetting plastics (duroplastics: polyalkydes, epoxy resins, polyurethanes, etc.) are
densely cross-linked.
Natural caoutchouc is used as raw material by the rubber industry, and after being vulcanized,
rubber is produced. The artificial caoutchoucs, the structure of which is similar to that of
natural chaoutchouc, are polymers and co-polymers of butadiene.
The range of products from plastics and rubber used in nearly all fields of everyday life is
steadily widening. Use of the large variety and excellent technical properties of this group of
materials results in items such as various building structures, furniture, clothes, commodities,
parts for vehicles and machines.
Typically, as organic materials, plastics and rubber also are considered to be combustible
materials. For the description of their fire behaviour, a number of parameters are used that
can be tested by special methods. With the knowledge of these parameters, one can allocate
the fields of their application (determined, pointed out, set), and the fire safety provisions can
be elaborated. These parameters are combustibility, ignitability, ability to develop smoke,
inclination to produce toxic gases and burning dripping.
In many cases the ignition temperature of plastics is higher than that of wood or any other
materials, but in most cases they ignite more easily, and their burning takes place more
rapidly and with higher intensity. Fires of plastics are often accompanied by the unpleasant
phenomena of large quantities of dense smoke being released that can strongly restrict
visibility and develop various toxic gases (hydrochloric acid, phosgene, carbon monoxide,
hydrogen cyanide, nitrous gases, etc.). Thermoplastic materials melt during burning, then
flow and depending on their location (if mounted in or on a ceiling) produce drops which
remain in the burning area and might ignite the combustible materials underneath.
The improvement of burning properties represents a complex problem and a key issue of
plastics chemistry. Fire-retardant agents inhibit combustibility, ignition will be slower, the
rate of combustion will fall, and flame propagation will slow down. At the same time, the
quantity and optical density of smoke will be higher and the gas mixture produced will be
more toxic.
Dusts
With regard to physical state, dusts belong to the solid materials, but their physical and
chemical properties differ from those of those same materials in compact form. It is known
that industrial accidents and catastrophes are caused by dust explosions. Materials that are
non-combustible in their usual form, such as metals, may initiate an explosion in the form of
dust mixed with air when affected by any ignition source, even of low energy. The hazard of
an explosion also exists with dusts of combustible materials.
Dust can be an explosion hazard not only when floating in the air, but also when settled. In
layers of dust, heat may accumulate, and slow burning may develop in the inside as a result
of the increased ability of particles to react and their lower thermal conductivity. Then the
dust may be stirred up by flashes, and the possibility of dust explosion will grow.
Floating particles in fine distribution present a more severe hazard. Similar to the explosion
properties of combustible gases and vapours, dusts also have a special range of air-dust
concentration in which an explosion may occur. The lower and upper limit values of
explosion concentration and the width of concentration range depend on the size and
distribution of particles. If the dust concentration exceeds the highest concentration leading to
an explosion, a portion of the dust is not destroyed by fire and absorbs heat, and as a
consequence the explosion pressure developed remains below the maximum. The moisture
content of air also influences the occurrence of an explosion. At higher humidity, the ignition
temperature of the cloud of dust will increase in proportion with the heat quantity necessary
for the evaporation of humidity. If an inert foreign dust is mixed in a cloud of dust, the
explosivity of the dust-air mixture will be reduced. The effect will be the same if inert gases
are mixed in the mixture of air and dust, because the oxygen concentration necessary for
burning will be lower.
Experience has shown that all the ignition sources, even of minimum ignition energy, are
capable of igniting dust clouds (open flames, electric arc, mechanical or electrostatic spark,
hot surfaces, etc.). According to test results obtained in laboratory, the energy demand for
ignition of dust clouds is 20 to 40 times higher than in the case of mixtures of combustible
vapour and air.
The factors that influence the explosion hazard for settled dusts are the physical and thermal
engineering properties of the dust layer, the glowing temperature of the dust and the ignition
properties of the decomposition products released by the dust layer.
For a fire safety education programme to be effective, there must be a major corporate policy
commitment to safety and the development of an effective plan that has the following steps:
(a) Planning phaseestablishment of goals and objectives; (b) Design and implementation
phase; and (c) Program evaluation phasemonitoring effectiveness.
Goals and objectives
Gratton (1991), in an important article on fire safety education, defined the differences
between goals, objectives and implementation practices or strategies. Goals are general
statements of intent that in the workplace may be said to reduce the number of fires and thus
reduce death and injury among workers, and the financial impact on companies.
The people and financial parts of the overall goal are not incompatible. Modern risk
management practice has demonstrated that improvements in safety for workers through
effective loss control practices can be financially rewarding to the company and have a
community benefit.
These goals need to be translated into specific fire safety objectives for particular companies
and their workforce. These objectives, which must be measurable, usually include statements
such as:
For many companies, there may be additional objectives such as reduction in business
interruption costs or minimization of legal liability exposure.
The tendency among some companies is to assume that compliance with local building codes
and standards is sufficient to ensure that their fire safety objectives are met. However, such
codes tend to concentrate on life safety, assuming fires will occur.
Modern fire safety management understands that absolute safety is not a realistic goal but sets
measurable performance objectives to:
provide effective means of limiting the size and consequence of fire incidents through
effective emergency equipment and procedures
use insurance to safeguard against large, unforeseen fires, particularly those arising from
natural hazards such as earthquakes and bushfires.
Design and implementation
The design and implementation of fire safety education programmes for fire prevention are
critically dependent upon development of well-planned strategies and effective management
and motivation of people. There must be strong and absolute corporate support for full
implementation of a fire safety programme for it to be successful.
The range of strategies have been identified by Koffel (1993) and in NFPAs Industrial Fire
Hazards Handbook (Linville 1990). They include:
promoting the company policy and strategies on fire safety to all company employees
identifying all potential fire scenarios and implementing appropriate risk reduction
actions
monitoring all local codes and standards that define the standard of care in a particular
industry
operating a loss administration programme to measure all losses for comparison with
performance objectives
training of all employees in proper fire prevention and emergency response techniques.
In the industrial field, Lees (1980) is an international authority. He indicated that in many
industries today, the potential for very large loss of life, serious injuries or property damage is
far greater than in the past. Large fires, explosions and toxic releases can result, particularly
in the petrochemical and nuclear industries.
Fire prevention is therefore the key to minimizing fire ignition. Modern industrial plants can
achieve good fire safety records through well-managed programmes of:
A useful guide, on the importance of housekeeping for fire prevention in commercial and
industrial premises is given by Higgins (1991) in the NFPAs Fire Protection Handbook.
The value of good housekeeping in minimizing combustible loads and in preventing exposure
of ignition sources is recognized in modern computer tools used for assessing fire risks in
industrial premises. The FREM (Fire Risk Evaluation Method) software in Australia
identifies housekeeping as a key fire safety factor (Keith 1994).
2.
3.
4.
These fire problems can be overcome through a combination of good housekeeping, proper
controls and interlocks, operator training and testing, and cleaning and maintenance in an
effective fire prevention programme.
Detailed recommendations for the various categories of heat utilization equipment are set out
in the NFPAs Fire Protection Handbook (Cote 1991).These are summarized below.
Ovens and furnaces
Fires and explosions in ovens and furnaces typically result from the fuel used, from volatile
substances provided by the material in the oven or by a combination of both. Many of these
ovens or furnaces operate at 500 to 1,000 C, which is well above the ignition temperature of
most materials.
Ovens and furnaces require a range of controls and interlocks to ensure that unburned fuel
gases or products of incomplete combustion cannot accumulate and be ignited. Typically,
these hazards develop while firing up or during shut-down operations. Therefore, special
training is required to ensure that operators always follow safety procedures.
Non-combustible building construction, separation of other equipment and combustible
materials and some form of automatic fire suppression are usually essential elements of a fire
safety system to prevent spread should a fire start.
Kilns
Kilns are used to dry timber (Lataille 1990) and to process or fire clay products (Hrbacek
1984).
Again, this high-temperature equipment represents a hazard to its surroundings. Proper
separation design and good housekeeping are essential to prevent fire.
Lumber kilns used for drying timber are additionally hazardous because the timber itself is a
high fire load and is often heated close to its ignition temperature. It is essential that kilns be
cleaned regularly to prevent a build-up of small pieces of wood and sawdust so that this does
not come in contact with the heating equipment. Kilns made of fire-resistive construction
material, fitted with automatic sprinklers and provided with high-quality ventilation/air
circulation systems are preferred.
Dehydrators and dryers
This equipment is used to reduce the moisture content of agricultural products such as milk,
eggs, grains, seeds and hay. The dryers may be direct-fired, in which case the productions of
combustion contact the material being dried, or they may be indirect-fired. In each case,
controls are required to shut off the heat supply in the event of excessive temperature or fire
in the dryer, exhaust system or conveyor system or failure of air circulation fans. Again,
adequate cleaning to prevent build-up of products that could ignite is required.
Quench tanks
The general principles of fire safety of quench tanks are identified by Ostrowski (1991) and
Watts (1990).
The process of quenching, or controlled cooling, occurs when a heated metal item is
immersed in a tank of quenching oil. The process is undertaken to harden or temper the
material through metallurgical change.
Most quenching oils are mineral oils which are combustible. They must be chosen carefully
for each application to ensure that the ignition temperature of the oil is above the operating
temperature of the tank as the hot metal pieces are immersed.
It is critical that the oil does not overflow the sides of the tank. Therefore, liquid level
controls and appropriate drains are essential.
Partial immersion of hot items is the most common cause of quench tank fires. This can be
prevented by appropriate material transfer or conveyor arrangements.
Likewise, appropriate controls must be provided to avoid excessive oil temperatures and
entry of water into the tank that can result in boil-over and major fire in and around the tank.
Specific automatic fire extinguishing systems such as carbon dioxide or dry chemical are
often used to protect the tank surface. Overhead, automatic sprinkler protection of the
building is desirable. In some cases, special protection of operators who need to work close to
the tank is also required. Often, water spray systems are provided for exposure protection for
workers.
Above all, proper training of workers in emergency response, including use of portable fire
extinguishers, is essential.
hazard assessmentcause/consequences.
results of explosions, particularly pressure shock waves that can destroy other plants and
buildings.
More details of process hazards and their control are given in Plant guidelines for technical
management of chemical process safety (AIChE 1993); Saxs Dangerous Properties of
Industrial Materials (Lewis 1979); and the NFPAs Industrial Fire Hazards Handbook
(Linville 1990).
Siting and exposure protection
Once the hazards and consequences of fire, explosion and toxic releases have been identified,
siting of chemical process plants can be undertaken.
Again, Lees (1980) and Bradford (1991) provided guidelines on plant siting. Plants must be
separated from surrounding communities sufficiently to ensure that those communities cannot
be affected by an industrial accident. The technique of quantitative risk assessment (QRA) to
determine separation distances is widely used and legislated for in the design of chemical
process plants.
The disaster in Bhopal, India, in 1984 demonstrated the consequences of locating a chemical
plant too close to a community: over 1,000 people were killed by toxic chemicals in an
industrial accident.
Provision of separating space around chemical plants also allows ready access for firefighting from all sides, regardless of wind direction.
Chemical plants must provide exposure protection in the form of explosion-resistant control
rooms, worker refuges and fire-fighting equipment to ensure that workers are protected and
that effective fire-fighting can be undertaken after an incident.
Spill control
Spills of flammable or hazardous materials should be kept small by appropriate process
design, fail-safe valves and appropriate detection/control equipment. However, if large spills
occur, they should be confined to areas surrounded by walls, sometimes of earth, where they
can burn harmlessly if ignited.
Fires in drainage systems are common, and special attention must be paid to drains and
sewerage systems.
Heat transfer hazards
Equipment that transfers heat from a hot fluid to a cooler one can be a source of fire in
chemical plants. Excessive localized temperatures can cause decomposition and burn out of
many materials. This may sometimes cause rupture of the heat-transfer equipment and
transfer of one fluid into another, causing an unwanted violent reaction.
High levels of inspection and maintenance, including cleaning of heat transfer equipment, is
essential to safe operation.
Reactors
Reactors are the vessels in which the desired chemical processes are undertaken. They can be
of a continuous or batch type but require special design attention. Vessels must be designed to
withstand pressures that might result from explosions or uncontrolled reactions or
alternatively must be provided with appropriate pressure-relief devices and sometimes
emergency venting.
Safety measures for chemical reactors include:
appropriate instrumentation and controls to detect potential incidents, including redundant
circuitry
high quality cleaning, inspection and maintenance of the equipment and the safety
controls
proper fire-resistant clothing and eye protection for operators and nearby workers
Lightning Protection
Lightning is a frequent cause of fires and deaths of people in many countries in the world. For
example, each year some 240 US citizens die as a result of lightning.
Lightning is a form of electrical discharge between charged clouds and the earth. The FM
Data Sheet (1984) on lightning indicates that lightning strikes may range from 2,000 to
200,000 A as a result of a potential difference of 5 to 50 million V between clouds and the
earth.
The frequency of lightning varies between countries and areas depending on the number of
thunderstorm-days per year for the locality. The damage that lightning can cause depends
very much on the ground condition, with more damage occurring in areas of high earth
resistivity.
Protective measuresbuildings
The NFPA 780 Standard for the Installation of Lightning Protection Systems (1995b) sets out
the design requirements for protection of buildings. While the exact theory of lightning
discharges is still being investigated, the basic principle of protection is to provide a means
by which a lightning discharge may enter or leave the earth without damaging the building
being protected.
Lightning systems, therefore, have two functions:
down conductors
More details for the design of lightning protection for buildings is provided by Davis (1991)
in the NFPA Fire Protection Handbook (Cote 1991) and in the British Standards Institutes
Code of Practice (1992).
Overhead transmission lines, transformers, outdoor substations and other electrical
installations can be damaged by direct lightning strikes. Electrical transmission equipment
can also pick up induced voltage and current surges that can enter buildings. Fires, damage to
equipment and serious interruption to operations may result. Surge arresters are required to
divert these voltage peaks to ground through effective earthing.
The increased use of sensitive computer equipment in commerce and industry has made
operations more sensitive to transient over-voltages induced in power and communication
cables in many buildings. Appropriate transient protection is required and special guidance is
provided in the British Standards Institute BS 6651:1992, The Protection of Structures
Against Lightning.
Maintenance
Proper maintenance of lightning systems is essential for effective protection. Special attention
has to be paid to ground connections. If they are not effective, lightning protection systems
will be ineffective.
Fire safety engineering work should begin early in the design phase because the fire safety
requirements influence the layout and design of the building considerably. In this way, the
designer can incorporate fire safety features into the building much better and more
economically. The overall approach includes consideration of both interior building functions
and layout, as well as exterior site planning. Prescriptive code requirements are more and
more replaced by functionally based requirements, which means there is an increased demand
for experts in this field. From the beginning of the construction project, the building designer
therefore should contact fire experts to elucidate the following actions:
The architect must utilize a given site in designing the building and adapt the functional and
engineering considerations to the particular site conditions that are present. In a similar
manner, the architect should consider site features in arriving at decisions on fire protection.
A particular set of site characteristics may significantly influence the type of active and
passive protection suggested by the fire consultant. Design features should consider the local
fire-fighting resources that are available and the time to reach the building. The fire service
cannot and should not be expected to provide complete protection for building occupants and
property; it must be assisted by both active and passive building fire defences, to provide
reasonable safety from the effects of fire. Briefly, the operations may be broadly grouped as
rescue, fire control and property conservation. The first priority of any fire-fighting operation
is to ensure that all occupants are out of the building before critical conditions occur.
Structural design based on classification or calculation
A well-established means of codifying fire protection and fire safety requirements for
buildings is to classify them by types of construction, based upon the materials used for the
structural elements and the degree of fire resistance afforded by each element. Classification
can be based on furnace tests in accordance with ISO 834 (fire exposure is characterized by
the standard temperature-time curve), combination of test and calculation or by calculation.
These procedures will identify the standard fire resistance (the ability to fulfil required
functions during 30, 60, 90 minutes, etc.) of a structural load-bearing and/or separating
member. Classification (especially when based on tests) is a simplified and conservative
method and is more and more replaced by functionally based calculation methods taking into
account the effect of fully developed natural fires. However, fire tests will always be
required, but they can be designed in a more optimal way and be combined with computer
simulations. In that procedure, the number of tests can be reduced considerably. Usually, in
the fire test procedures, load-bearing structural elements are loaded to 100% of the design
load, but in real life the load utilization factor is most often less than that. Acceptance criteria
are specific for the construction or element tested. Standard fire resistance is the measured
time the member can withstand the fire without failure.
Optimum fire engineering design, balanced against anticipated fire severity, is the objective
of structural and fire protection requirements in modern performance-based codes. These
have opened the way for fire engineering design by calculation with prediction of the
temperature and structural effect due to a complete fire process (heating and subsequent
cooling is considered) in a compartment. Calculations based on natural fires mean that the
structural elements (important for the stability of the building) and the whole structure are not
allowed to collapse during the entire fire process, including cool down.
Comprehensive research has been performed during the past 30 years. Various computer
models have been developed. These models utilize basic research on mechanical and thermal
properties of materials at elevated temperatures. Some computer models are validated against
a vast number of experimental data, and a good prediction of structural behaviour in fire is
obtained.
Compartmentation
A fire compartment is a space within a building extending over one or several floors which is
enclosed by separating members such that the fire spread beyond the compartment is
prevented during the relevant fire exposure. Compartmentation is important in preventing the
fire to spread into too large spaces or into the whole building. People and property outside the
fire compartment can be protected by the fact that the fire is extinguished or burns out by
itself or by the delaying effect of the separating members on the spread of fire and smoke
until the occupants are rescued to a place of safety.
The fire resistance required by a compartment depends upon its intended purpose and on the
expected fire. Either the separating members enclosing the compartment shall resist the
maximum expected fire or contain the fire until occupants are evacuated. The load-bearing
elements in the compartment must always resist the complete fire process or be classified to a
certain resistance measured in terms of periods of time, which is equal or longer than the
requirement of the separating members.
Structural integrity during a fire
The requirement for maintaining structural integrity during a fire is the avoidance of
structural collapse and the ability of the separating members to prevent ignition and flame
spread into adjacent spaces. There are different approaches to provide the design for fire
resistance. They are classifications based on standard fire-resistance test as in ISO 834,
combination of test and calculation or solely calculation and the performance-based
procedure computer prediction based on real fire exposure.
Interior finish
Interior finish is the material that forms the exposed interior surface of walls, ceilings and
floor. There are many types of interior finish materials such as plaster, gypsum, wood and
plastics. They serve several functions. Some functions of the interior material are acoustical
and insulational, as well as protective against wear and abrasion.
Interior finish is related to fire in four different ways. It can affect the rate of fire build-up to
flashover conditions, contribute to fire extension by flame spread, increase the heat release by
adding fuel and produce smoke and toxic gases. Materials that exhibit high rates of flame
spread, contribute fuel to a fire or produce hazardous quantities of smoke and toxic gases
would be undesirable.
Smoke movement
In building fires, smoke often moves to locations remote from the fire space. Stairwells and
elevator shafts can become smoke-logged, thereby blocking evacuation and inhibiting firefighting. Today, smoke is recognized as the major killer in fire situations (see figure 41.4).
Figure 41.4 The production of smoke from a fire
The driving forces of smoke movement include naturally occurring stack effect, buoyancy of
combustion gases, the wind effect, fan-powered ventilation systems and the elevator piston
effect.
When it is cold outside, there is an upward movement of air within building shafts. Air in the
building has a buoyant force because it is warmer and therefore less dense than outside air.
The buoyant force causes air to rise within building shafts. This phenomenon is known as the
stack effect. The pressure difference from the shaft to the outside, which causes smoke
movement, is illustrated below:
where
Pso
g
Patm
R
To
Ts
z
High-temperature smoke from a fire has a buoyancy force due to its reduced density. The
equation for buoyancy of combustion gases is similar to the equation for the stack effect.
In addition to buoyancy, the energy released by a fire can cause smoke movement due to
expansion. Air will flow into the fire compartment, and hot smoke will be distributed in the
compartment. Neglecting the added mass of the fuel, the ratio of volumetric flows can simply
be expressed as a ratio of absolute temperature.
Wind has a pronounced effect on smoke movement. The elevator piston effect should not be
neglected. When an elevator car moves in a shaft, transient pressures are produced.
Heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC) systems transport smoke during building
fires. When a fire starts in an unoccupied portion of a building, the HVAC system can
transport smoke to another occupied space. The HVAC system should be designed so that
either the fans are shut down or the system transfers into a special smoke control mode
operation.
Smoke movement can be managed by use of one or more of the following mechanisms:
compartmentation, dilution, air flow, pressurization or buoyancy.
Evacuation of Occupants
Egress design
Egress design should be based upon an evaluation of a buildings total fire protection system
(see figure 41.5).
Figure 41.5 Principles of exit safety
People evacuating from a burning building are influenced by a number of impressions during
their escape. The occupants have to make several decisions during the escape in order to
make the right choices in each situation. These reactions can differ widely, depending upon
the physical and mental capabilities and conditions of building occupants.
The building will also influence the decisions made by the occupants by its escape routes,
guidance signs and other installed safety systems. The spread of fire and smoke will have the
strongest impact on how the occupants make their decisions. The smoke will limit the
visibility in the building and create a non-tenable environment to the evacuating persons.
Radiation from fire and flames creates large spaces that cannot be used for evacuation, which
increases the risk.
In designing means of egress one first needs a familiarity with the reaction of people in fire
emergencies. Patterns of movement of people must be understood.
The three stages of evacuation time are notification time, reaction time and time to evacuate.
The notification time is related to whether there is a fire alarm system in the building or if the
occupant is able to understand the situation or how the building is divided into compartments.
The reaction time depends on the occupants ability to make decisions, the properties of the
fire (such as the amount of heat and smoke) and how the buildings egress system is planned.
Finally, the time to evacuate depends on where in the building crowds are formed and how
people move in various situations.
In specific buildings with mobile occupants, for example, studies have shown certain
reproducible flow characteristics from persons exiting the buildings. These predictable flow
characteristics have fostered computer simulations and modelling to aid the egress design
process.
The evacuation travel distances are related to the fire hazard of the contents. The higher the
hazard, the shorter the travel distance to an exit.
A safe exit from a building requires a safe path of escape from the fire environment. Hence,
there must be a number of properly designed means of egress of adequate capacity. There
should be at least one alternative means of egress considering that fire, smoke and the
characteristics of occupants and so on may prevent use of one means of egress. The means of
egress must be protected against fire, heat and smoke during the egress time. Thus, it is
necessary to have building codes that consider the passive protection, according to evacuation
and of course to fire protection. A building must manage the critical situations, which are
given in the codes concerning evacuation. For example, in the Swedish Building Codes, the
smoke layer must not reach below 1.6 + 0.1H (H is the total compartment height), maximum
radiation 10 kW/m2 of short duration, and the temperature in the breathing air must not
exceed 80 C.
An effective evacuation can take place if a fire is discovered early and the occupants are
alerted promptly with a detection and alarm system. A proper mark of the means of egress
surely facilitates the evacuation. There is also a need for organization and drill of evacuation
procedures.
Human behaviour during fires
How one reacts during a fire is related to the role assumed, previous experience, education
and personality; the perceived threat of the fire situation; the physical characteristics and
means of egress available within the structure; and the actions of others who are sharing the
experience. Detailed interviews and studies over 30 years have established that instances of
non-adaptive, or panic, behaviour are rare events that occur under specific conditions. Most
behaviour in fires is determined by information analysis, resulting in cooperative and
altruistic actions.
Human behaviour is found to pass through a number of identified stages, with the possibility
of various routes from one stage to the next. In summary, the fire is seen as having three
general stages:
1. The individual receives initial cues and investigates or misinterprets these initial cues.
2. Once the fire is apparent, the individual will try to obtain further information, contact
others or leave.
3. The individual will thereafter deal with the fire, interact with others or escape.
Pre-fire activity is an important factor. If a person is engaged in a well-known activity, for
example eating a meal in a restaurant, the implications for subsequent behaviour are
considerable.
Cue reception may be a function of pre-fire activity. There is a tendency for gender
differences, with females more likely to be recipients of noises and odours, though the effect
is only slight. There are role differences in initial responses to the cue. In domestic fires, if
the female receives the cue and investigates, the male, when told, is likely to have a look
and delay further actions. In larger establishments, the cue may be an alarm warning.
Information may come from others and has been found to be inadequate for effective
behaviour.
Individuals may or may not have realized that there is a fire. An understanding of their
behaviour must take account of whether they have defined their situation correctly.
When the fire has been defined, the prepare stage occurs. The particular type of occupancy
is likely to have a great influence on exactly how this stage develops. The prepare stage
includes in chronological order instruct, explore and withdraw.
The act stage, which is the final stage, depends upon role, occupancy, and earlier behaviour
and experience. It may be possible for early evacuation or effective fire-fighting to occur.
Building transportation systems
Building transportation systems must be considered during the design stage and should be
integrated with the whole buildings fire protection system. The hazards associated with these
systems must be included in any pre-fire planning and fire protection survey.
Building transportation systems, such as elevators and escalators, make high-rise buildings
feasible. Elevator shafts can contribute to the spread of smoke and fire. On the other hand, an
elevator is a necessary tool for fire-fighting operations in high-rise buildings.
Transportation systems may contribute to dangerous and complicated fire safety problems
because an enclosed elevator shaft acts as a chimney or flue because of the stack effect of hot
smoke and gases from fire. This generally results in the movement of smoke and combustion
products from lower to upper levels of the building.
High-rise buildings present new and different problems to fire-suppression forces, including
the use of elevators during emergencies. Elevators are unsafe in a fire for several reasons:
1. Persons may push a corridor button and have to wait for an elevator that may never
respond, losing valuable escape time.
2. Elevators do not prioritize car and corridor calls, and one of the calls may be at the fire
floor.
3. Elevators cannot start until the lift and shaft doors are closed, and panic could lead to
overcrowding of an elevator and the blockage of the doors, which would thus prevent closing.
4. The power can fail during a fire at any time, thus leading to entrapment. (See figure 41.6)
Figure 41.6 An example of a pictographic warning message for elevator use
All employees should be assigned to check for availability, to count occupants when they are
outside the fire area, to search for stragglers and to control re-entry. They should also
recognize the evacuation signal and know the exit route they are to follow. Primary and
alternative routes should be established, and all employees should be trained to use either
route. After each exit drill, a meeting of responsible managers should be held to evaluate the
success of the drill and to solve any kind of problem that could have occurred.
2.
7.
remote alarm indication to an external response location, such as the fire department
8.
intended to control the spread of fire, many systems have accomplished complete
extinguishment.
Figure 41.8 A typical sprinkler installation showing all common water supplies, outdoor
hydrants and underground piping
A common misconception is that all automatic sprinkler heads open in the event of a fire. In
fact, each sprinkler head is designed to open only when sufficient heat is present to indicate a
fire. Water then flows only from the sprinkler head(s) that have opened as the result of fire in
their immediate vicinity. This design feature provides efficient use of water for fire-fighting
and limits water damage.
Water supply
Water for an automatic sprinkler system must be available in sufficient quantity and at
sufficient volume and pressure at all times to ensure reliable operation in the event of fire.
Where a municipal water supply cannot meet this requirement, a reservoir or pump
arrangement must be provided to provide a secure water supply.
Control valves
Control valves should be maintained in the open position at all times. Often, supervision of
the control valves can be accomplished by the automatic fire alarm system by provision of
valve tamper switches that will initiate a trouble or supervisory signal at the fire alarm control
panel to indicate a closed valve. If this type of monitoring cannot be provided, the valves
should be locked in the open position.
Piping
Water flows through a piping network, ordinarily suspended from the ceiling, with the
sprinkler heads suspended at intervals along the pipes. Piping used in sprinkler systems
should be of a type that can withstand a working pressure of not less than 1,200 kPa. For
exposed piping systems, fittings should be of the screwed, flanged, mechanical joint or
brazed type.
Sprinkler heads
A sprinkler head consists of an orifice, normally held closed by a temperature-sensitive
releasing element, and a spray deflector. The water discharge pattern and spacing
requirements for individual sprinkler heads are used by sprinkler designers to ensure
complete coverage of the protected risk.
Water spray systems increase the effectiveness of water by producing smaller water droplets,
and thus a greater surface area of water is exposed to the fire, with a relative increase in heat
absorption capability. This type of system is often chosen as a means of keeping large
pressure vessels, such as butane spheres, cool when there is a risk of an exposure fire
originating in an adjacent area. The system is similar to a sprinkler system; however, all
heads are open, and a separate detection system or manual action is used to open control
valves. This allows water to flow through the piping network to all spray devices that serve as
outlets from the piping system.
Foam systems
In a foam system, a liquid concentrate is injected into the water supply before the control
valve. Foam concentrate and air are mixed, either through the mechanical action of discharge
or by aspirating air into the discharge device. The air entrained in the foam solution creates an
expanded foam. As expanded foam is less dense than most hydrocarbons, the expanded foam
forms a blanket on top of the flammable liquid. This foam blanket reduces fuel vapour
propagation. Water, which represents as much as 97% of the foam solution, provides a
cooling effect to further reduce vapour propagation and to cool hot objects that could serve as
a source of re-ignition.
Gaseous extinguishing systems
Carbon dioxide systems
Carbon dioxide systems consist of a supply of carbon dioxide, stored as liquified compressed
gas in pressure vessels (see figure 41.9 and figure 41.10). The carbon dioxide is held in the
pressure vessel by means of an automatic valve that is opened upon fire by means of a
separate detection system or by manual operation. Once released, the carbon dioxide is
delivered to the fire by means of a piping and discharge nozzle arrangement. Carbon dioxide
extinguishes fire by displacing the oxygen available to the fire. Carbon dioxide systems can
be designed for use in open areas such as printing presses or enclosed volumes such as ship
machinery spaces. Carbon dioxide, at fire-extinguishing concentrations, is toxic to people,
and special measures must be employed to ensure that persons in the protected area are
evacuated before discharge occurs. Pre-discharge alarms and other safety measures must be
carefully incorporated into the design of the system to ensure adequate safety for people
working in the protected area. Carbon dioxide is considered to be a clean extinguishant
because it does not cause collateral damage and is electrically non-conductive.
Figure 41.9 Diagram of a high-pressure carbon dioxide system for total flooding
Figure 41.10 A total flooding system installed in a room with a raised floor
Inert gas systems generally use a mixture of nitrogen and argon as an extinguishing medium.
In some cases, a small percentage of carbon dioxide is also provided in the gas mixture. The
inert gas mixtures extinguish fires by reducing oxygen concentration within a protected
volume. They are suitable for use in enclosed spaces only. The unique feature offered by inert
gas mixtures is that they reduce the oxygen to a low enough concentration to extinguish many
types of fires; however, oxygen levels are not sufficiently lowered to pose an immediate
threat to occupants of the protected space. The inert gases are compressed and stored in
pressure vessels. System operation is similar to a carbon dioxide system. As the inert gases
cannot be liquified by compression, the number of storage vessels required for protection of a
given enclosed protected volume is greater than that for carbon dioxide.
Halon systems
Halons 1301, 1211 and 2402 have been identified as ozone-depleting substances. Production
of these extinguishing agents ceased in 1994, as required by the Montreal Protocol, an
international agreement to protect the earths ozone layer. Halon 1301 was most often used in
fixed fire protection systems. Halon 1301 was stored as liquified, compressed gas in pressure
vessels in a similar arrangement to that used for carbon dioxide. The advantage offered by
halon 1301 was that storage pressures were lower and that very low concentrations provided
effective extinguishing capability. Halon 1301 systems were used successfully for totally
enclosed hazards where the extinguishing concentration achieved could be maintained for a
sufficient time for extinguishment to occur. For most risks, concentrations used did not pose
an immediate threat to occupants. Halon 1301 is still used for several important applications
where acceptable alternatives have yet to be developed. Examples include use on-board
commercial and military aircraft and for some special cases where inerting concentrations are
required to prevent explosions in areas where occupants could be present. The halon in
existing halon systems that are no longer required should be made available for use by others
with critical applications. This will militate against the need to produce more of these
environmentally sensitive extinguishers and help protect the ozone layer.
Halocarbon systems
Halocarbon agents were developed as the result of the environmental concerns associated
with halons. These agents differ widely in toxicity, environmental impact, storage weight and
volume requirements, cost and availability of approved system hardware. They all can be
stored as liquified compressed gases in pressure vessels. System configuration is similar to a
carbon dioxide system.
Further Information
This section of the Encyclopaedia presents a very brief and limited overview of the available
choice of active fire protection systems. Readers may often obtain more information by
contacting a national fire protection association, their insurer or the fire prevention
department of their local fire service.
Very often, a plea is taken that the property is insured and loss due to fire, if any, will be
indemnified by the insurance company. It must be appreciated that insurance is only a device
to spread the effect of the destruction brought by fire or explosion on as many people as
possible. It cannot make good the national loss. Besides, insurance is no guarantee of
continuity of production and elimination or minimization of consequential losses.
What is indicated, therefore, is that the management must gather complete information on the
fire and explosion hazard, evaluate the loss potential and implement suitable measures to
control the hazard, with a view to eliminating or minimizing the incidence of fire and
explosion. This involves the setting up of a private emergency organization.
Emergency Planning
Such an organization must, as far as possible, be considered from the planning stage itself,
and implemented progressively from the time of selection of site until production has started,
and then continued thereafter.
Success of any emergency organization depends to a large extent on the overall participation
of all workers and various echelons of the management. This fact must be borne in mind
while planning the emergency organization.
The various aspects of emergency planning are mentioned below. For more details, a
reference may be made to the US National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Fire
Protection Handbook or any other standard work on the subject (Cote 1991).
Stage 1
Initiate the emergency plan by doing the following:
1. Identify and evaluate fire and explosion hazards associated with the transportation,
handling and storage of each raw material, intermediate and finished products and each
industrial process, as well as work out detailed preventive measures to counteract the hazards
with a view to eliminating or minimizing them.
2. Work out the requirements of fire protection installations and equipment, and determine
the stages at which each is to be provided.
3.
Stage 2
Determine the following:
1. availability of adequate water supply for fire protection in addition to the requirements
for processing and domestic use
2.
susceptibility of site and natural hazards, such as floods, earthquakes, heavy rains, etc.
3. environments, i.e., the nature and extent of surrounding property and the exposure
hazard involved in the event of a fire or explosion
4. existence of private (works) or public fire brigade(s), the distance at which such fire
brigade(s) is (are) located and the suitability of the appliances available with them for the risk
to be protected and whether they can be called upon to assist in an emergency
5. response from the assisting fire brigade(s) with particular reference to impediments,
such as railway crossings, ferries, inadequate strength and (or) width of bridges in relation to
the fire appliances, difficult traffic, etc.
6. socio-political environment , i.e., incidence of crime, and political activities leading to
law-and-order problems.
Stage 3
Prepare the layout and building plans, and the specifications of construction material. Carry
out the following tasks:
1.
Limit the floor area of each shop, workplace, etc. by providing fire walls, fire doors, etc.
2.
3.
Ensure that steel columns and other structural members are not exposed.
4.
5.
6. Ensure the provision of adequate access roads in the layout plan to enable fire appliances
to reach all parts of the premises and all sources of water for fire-fighting.
Stage 4
During construction, do the following:
1. Acquaint the contractor and his or her employees with the fire risk management policies,
and enforce compliance.
2.
Thoroughly test all fire protection installations and equipment before acceptance.
Stage 5
If the size of the industry, its hazards or its out-of-the-way location is such that a full-time fire
brigade must be available on the premises, then organize, equip and train the required fulltime personnel. Also appoint a full-time fire officer.
Stage 6
To ensure full participation of all employees, do the following:
1. Train all personnel in the observance of precautionary measures in their day-to-day work
and the action required of them upon an outbreak of fire or explosion. The training must
include operation of fire-fighting equipment.
2. Ensure strict observance of fire precautions by all concerned personnel through periodic
reviews.
3. Ensure regular inspection and maintenance of all fire protection systems and equipment.
All defects must be rectified promptly.
Managing the emergency
To avoid confusion at the time of an actual emergency, it is essential that everyone in the
organization knows the precise part that he (she) and others are expected to play during the
emergency. A well-thought-out emergency plan must be prepared and promulgated for this
purpose, and all concerned personnel must be made fully familiar with it. The plan must
clearly and unambiguously lay down the responsibilities of all concerned and also specify a
chain of command. As a minimum, the emergency plan should include the following:
1.
2.
3.
purpose and objective of the emergency plan and effective date of its coming in force
4.
fire protection systems, mobile appliances and portable equipment, with details
7.
8.
others
10. chain of command at the scene of the incident. Consider all possible situations, and
indicate clearly who is to assume command in each case, including the circumstances under
which another organization is to be called in to assist.
11. action after a fire. Indicate responsibility for:
recommissioning or replenishing of all fire protection systems, equipment and water
sources
When a mutual assistance plan is in operation, copies of emergency plan must be supplied to
all participating units in return for similar plans of their respective premises.
Evacuation Protocols
A situation necessitating the execution of the emergency plan may develop as a result of
either an explosion or a fire.
Explosion may or may not be followed by fire, but in almost all cases, it produces a
shattering effect, which may injure or kill personnel present in the vicinity and/or cause
physical damage to property, depending upon the circumstances of each case. It may also
cause shock and confusion and may necessitate the immediate shut-down of the
manufacturing processes or a portion thereof, along with the sudden movement of a large
number of people. If the situation is not controlled and guided in an orderly manner
immediately, it may lead to panic and further loss of life and property.
Smoke given out by the burning material in a fire may involve other parts of the property
and/or trap persons, necessitating an intensive, large-scale rescue operation/evacuation. In
certain cases, large-scale evacuation may have to be undertaken when people are likely to get
trapped or affected by fire.
In all cases in which large-scale sudden movement of personnel is involved, traffic problems
are also createdparticularly if public roads, streets or areas have to be used for this
movement. If such problems are not anticipated and suitable action is not preplanned, traffic
bottlenecks result, which hamper and retard fire extinguishment and rescue efforts.
Evacuation of a large number of personsparticularly from high-rise buildingsmay also
present problems. For successful evacuation, it is not only necessary that adequate and
suitable means of escape are available, but also that the evacuation be effected speedily.
Special attention should be given to the evacuation needs of disabled individuals.
Detailed evacuation procedures must, therefore, be included in the emergency plan. These
must be frequently tested in the conduct of fire and evacuation drills, which may also involve
traffic problems. All participating and concerned organizations and agencies must also be
involved in these drills, at least periodically. After each exercise, a debriefing session must be
held, during which all mistakes are pointed out and explained. Action must also be taken to
prevent repetition of the same mistakes in future exercises and actual incidents by removing
all difficulties and reviewing the emergency plan as necessary.
Proper records must be maintained of all exercises and evacuation drills.
Facility Restoration
It is important that all fire protection and emergency facilities are restored to a ready mode
soon after the emergency is over. For this purpose, responsibility must be assigned to a
person or section of the industry, and this must be included in the emergency plan. A system
of checks to ensure that this is being done must also be introduced.
familiar with the risk and what it could expect during an emergency. Frequent interaction
with the public fire department is necessary for this purpose.
These include all possibilities of a material causing personal injury from contact with or
absorption into the human body. A health hazard may arise out of the inherent properties of
the material or from the toxic products of combustion or decomposition of the material. The
degree of hazard is assigned on the basis of the greater hazard that may result under fire or
other emergency conditions. It indicates to fire-fighters whether they can work safely only
with special protective clothing or with suitable respiratory protective equipment or with
ordinary clothing.
Degree of health hazard is measured on a scale of 4 to 0, with 4 indicating the most severe
hazard and 0 indicating low hazard or no hazard.
Flammability hazards
These indicate the susceptibility of the material to burning. It is recognized that materials
behave differently in respect of this property under varying circumstances (e.g., materials that
may burn under one set of conditions may not burn if the conditions are altered). The form
and inherent properties of the materials influence the degree of hazard, which is assigned on
the same basis as for the health hazard.
Reactivity (instability) hazards
The top square indicates the health hazard, the one on the left indicates the flammability
hazard, the one on the right indicates the reactivity hazard, and the bottom square indicates
other special hazards, such as radioactivity or unusual reactivity with water.
To supplement the above mentioned arrangement, a colour code may also be used. The colour
is used as background or the numeral indicating the hazard may be in coded colour. The
codes are health hazard (blue), flammability hazard (red), reactivity hazard (yellow) and
special hazard (white background).
4. Most flammable vapours are heavier than air. Such vapours and heavier-than-air
flammable gases that may be accidentally released during collection or disposal or during
handling and transportation can travel considerable distances with the wind or towards a
lower gradient. On coming in contact with a source of ignition, they flash back to source.
Major spills of flammable liquids are particularly hazardous in this respect and may require
evacuation to save lives.
5. Pyrophoric materials, such as aluminium alkyls, ignite spontaneously when exposed to
air. Special care must therefore be taken in handling, transportation, storage and disposal of
such materials, preferably carried out under a nitrogen atmosphere.
6. Certain materials, such as potassium, sodium and aluminium alkyls, react violently with
water or moisture and burn fiercely. Bronze powder generates considerable heat in the
presence of moisture.
7. The presence of potent oxidants with organic materials can cause rapid combustion or
even an explosion. Rags and other materials soaked with vegetable oils or terpenes present a
risk of spontaneous combustion due to the oxidation of oils and subsequent build-up of heat
to the ignition temperature.
8. Several substances are corrosive and may cause severe damage or burns to skin or other
living tissues, or may corrode construction materials, especially metals, thereby weakening
the structure in which such materials may have been used.
9. Some substances are toxic and can poison humans or animals by contact with skin,
inhalation or contamination of food or water. Their ability to do so may be short lived or may
extend over a long period. Such substances, if disposed of by dumping or burning, can
contaminate water sources or come into contact with animals or workers.
10. Toxic substances that are spilled during industrial processing, transportation (including
accidents), handling or storage, and toxic gases that are released into the atmosphere can
affect emergency personnel and others, including the public. The hazard is all the more severe
if the spilled substance(s) is vaporized at ambient temperature, because the vapours can be
carried over long distances due to wind drift or run-off.
11. Certain substances may emit a strong, pungent or unpleasant odour, either by themselves
or when they are burnt in the open. In either case, such substances are a public nuisance, even
though they may not be toxic, and they must be disposed of by proper incineration, unless it
is possible to collect and recycle them. Just as odorous substances are not necessarily toxic,
odourless substances and some substances with a pleasant odour may produce harmful
physiological effects.
12. Certain substances, such as explosives, fireworks, organic peroxides and some other
chemicals, are sensitive to heat or shock and may explode with devastating effect if not
handled carefully or mixed with other substances. Such substances must, therefore, be
carefully segregated and destroyed under proper supervision.
13. Waste materials that are contaminated with radioactivity can be as hazardous as the
radioactive materials themselves. Their disposal requires specialized knowledge. Proper
guidance for disposal of such waste may be obtained from a countrys nuclear energy
organization.
Some of the methods that may be employed to dispose of industrial and emergency waste are
biodegradation, burial, incineration, landfill, mulching, open burning, pyrolysis and disposal
through a contractor. These are briefly explained below.
Biodegradation
Many chemicals are completely destroyed within six to 24 months when they are mixed with
the top 15 cm of soil. This phenomenon is known as biodegradation and is due to the action
of soil bacteria. Not all substances, however, behave in this way.
Burial
This is one of the safest and most satisfactory methods of waste disposal if the waste is
burned in a properly designed incinerator under controlled conditions. Care must be taken,
however, to ensure that the substances contained in the waste are amenable to safe
incineration without posing any operating problem or special hazard. Almost all industrial
incinerators require the installation of air pollution control equipment, which must be
carefully selected and installed after taking into consideration the composition of the stock
effluent given out by the incinerator during the burning of industrial waste.
Care must be taken in the operation of the incinerator to ensure that its operative temperature
does not rise excessively either because a large amount of volatiles is fed or because of the
nature of the waste burned. Structural failure can occur because of excessive temperature, or,
over time, because of corrosion. The scrubber must also be periodically inspected for signs of
corrosion which can occur because of contact with acids, and the scrubber system must be
maintained regularly to ensure proper functioning.
Landfill
Low-lying land or a depression in land is often used as a dump for waste materials until it
becomes level with the surrounding land. The waste is then levelled, covered with earth and
rolled hard. The land is then used for buildings or other purposes.
For satisfactory landfill operation, the site must be selected with due regard to the proximity
of pipelines, sewer lines, power lines, oil and gas wells, mines and other hazards. The waste
must then be mixed with earth and evenly spread out in the depression or a wide trench. Each
layer must be mechanically compacted before the next layer is added.
A 50 cm layer of earth is typically laid over the waste and compacted, leaving sufficient vents
in the soil for the escape of gas that is produced by biological activity in the waste. Attention
must also be paid to proper drainage of the landfill area.
Depending on the various constituents of waste material, it may at times ignite within the
landfill. Each such area must, therefore, be properly fenced off and continued surveillance
maintained until the chances of ignition appear to be remote. Arrangements must also be
made for extinguishing any fire that may break out in the waste within the landfill.
Mulching
Some trials have been made for reusing polymers as mulch (loose material for protecting the
roots of plants) by chopping the waste into small shreds or granules. When so used, it
degrades very slowly. Its effect on the soil is, therefore, purely physical. This method has,
however, not been used widely.
Open burning
Open burning of waste causes pollution of the atmosphere and is hazardous in as much as
there is a chance of the fire getting out of control and spreading to the surrounding property
or areas. Also, there is a chance of explosion from containers, and there is a possibility of
harmful physiological effects of radioactive materials that may be contained in the waste.
This method of disposal has been banned in some countries. It is not a desirable method and
should be discouraged.
Pyrolysis
Recovery of certain compounds, by distillation of the products given out during pyrolysis
(decomposition by heating) of polymers and organic substances, is possible, but not yet
widely adopted.
Disposal through contractors
This is probably the most convenient method. It is important that only reliable contractors
who are knowledgeable and experienced in the disposal of industrial waste and hazardous
materials are selected for the job. Hazardous materials must be carefully segregated and
disposed of separately.
Specific classes of materials
Specific examples of the types of hazardous materials that are often found in todays industry
include: (1) combustible and reactive metals, such as magnesium, potassium, lithium,
sodium, titanium and zirconium; (2) combustible refuse; (3) drying oils; (4) flammable
liquids and waste solvents; (5) oxidizing materials (liquids and solids); and (6) radioactive
materials. These materials require special handling and precautions that must be carefully
studied. For more details on identification of hazardous materials and hazards of industrial
materials, the following publications may be consulted: Fire Protection Handbook (Cote
1991) and Saxs Dangerous Properties of Industrial Materials (Lewis 1979).
REFERENCES
American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). 1993. Plant Guidelines for Technical
Management of Chemical Process Safety. New York: Center for Chemical Process Safety.
American Welding Society (AWS). 1988. Recommended Safe Practices for the Preparation
for Welding and Cutting of Containers that have held Hazardous Substances. Miami: AWS.
Babrauskas, V and SJ Grayson. 1992. Heat Release in Fires. Barking: Elsevier Science.
Blye, P and P Bacon. 1991. Fire prevention practices in commerce and industry. Chap. 2,
Section 2 in Fire Protection Handbook, 17th ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Bowes, PC. 1984. Self-Heating: Evaluating and Controlling the Hazards. London: Her
Majestys Stationary Office.
Bradford, WJ. 1991. Chemical processing equipment. Chap. 15, Section 2 in Fire Protection
Handbook, 17th ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
British Standards Institute (BSI). 1992. The Protection of Structures Against Lightning.
British Standard Code of Practice, BS6651. London: BSI.
Bugbee, P. 1978. Principles of Fire Protection. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Cote, AE. 1991. Fire Protection Handbook, 17th ed. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Davis, NH. 1991. Lightning protection systems. Chap. 32, Section 2 in Fire Protection
Handbook, 17th ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
DiNenno, PJ. 1988. Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering. Boston: SFPE.
Drysdale, DD. 1985. Introduction to Fire Dynamics. Chichester: Wiley.
Drysdale, DD and HE Thomson. 1994. Fourth International Symposium on Fire Safety
Science. Ottawa: IAFSS.
European Commission Directive (ECD). 1992. The Management of Health and Safety at
Work Regulations.
Factory Mutual Engineering Corporation (FM). 1977. Cutting and welding. Loss Prevention
Data Sheets 10-15, June 1977.
. 1984. Lightning and surge protection for electrical systems. Loss Prevention Data Sheets
5-11/14-19, August 1984.
Gratton, J. 1991. Firesafety education. Chap. 2, Section 1 in Fire Protection Handbook, 17th
ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Higgins, JT. 1991. Housekeeping practices. Chap. 34, Section 2 in Fire Protection Handbook,
17th ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Hrbacek, EM. 1984. Clay products plants. In Industrial Fire Hazards Handbook, edited by J
Linville. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Hunter, K. 1991. Technology distinguishes Japans fire service. Natl Fire Prev Agen J
(September/October).
Jernberg, LE. 1993. Improving risks in Sweden. Fire Prev 257 (March).
Keith, R. 1994. FREM-Fire Risk Evaluation Method. Melbourne: R. Keith & Assoc.
Koffel, WE. 1993. Establishing industrial fire safety programs. Natl Fire Prev Agen J
(March/April).
Lataille, JJ. 1990. Lumber kilns and agricultural dehydrators and dryers. In Industrial Fire
Hazards Handbook, edited by J Linville. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Lees, FP. 1980. Loss Prevention in the Process Industries. Vols. 1, 2. London: Butterworths.
Lewis, RRJ. 1979. Saxs Dangerous Properties of Industrial Materials. New York: Van
Nostrand Reinhold.
Linville, J (ed.). 1990. Industrial Fire Hazards Handbook. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Loss Prevention Council. 1992. Fire Prevention On Construction Sites. London: Loss
Prevention Council.
Manz, A. 1991. Welding and cutting. Chap. 14, Section 2 in Fire Protection Handbook, 17th
ed., edited by AE Cote. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA). 1983. Firesafety Educators Handbook: A
Comprehensive Guide to Planning, Designing, and Implementing Firesafety Programs. FSO61. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
. 1990a. Standard System for the Identification of the Fire Hazards of Materials. NFPA No.
704. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
. 1992. Fire Prevention Code. NFPA No.1. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
. 1995a. Guide to the Fire Safety Concepts Tree. NFPA No. 550. Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
. 1995b. Standard for the Installation of Lighting Protection Systems. NFPA No.780.
Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Osterhoust, C. 1990. Public Fire Education. IFSTA No. 606. Stillwater, Okla.: International
Fire Services Training Association (IFSTA).
Ostrowski, R. 1991. Oil quenching. Fire Protection Handbook, 17th ed., edited by AE Cote.
Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Palmer, KN. 1973. Dust Explosion and Fires. London: Chapman & Hall.
Simmons, JM. 1990. Heat processing equipment. In Industrial Fire Hazards Handbook.
Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Welch, J. 1993. The changing face of FPA training: Fire prevention. Fire Prev
(July/August):261.
Welty, JR, RE Wilson, and CE Wicks. 1976. Fundamentals of Momentun, Heat and Mass
Transfer. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Watts, KI. 1990. Oil quenching. In Industrial Fire Hazards Handbook, edited by J Linville.
Quincy, Mass.: NFPA.
Donoghue, EA. 1991. Building transportation system. In Fire Protection Handbook, edited by
AE Cote. Quincy, MA: NFPA.
Eggleston, LA and AJ Pryor. 1967. The limits of dust explosibility. Fire Technol 3(2):77-89.
Eurocode 1: Basis of Design and Actions on Structures. Part 2.2: Actions on Structures
Exposed to Fire (1991-2-2): CEN, ENV 1991-2-2.
Goodall, DG and R Ingle. 1967. The ignition of flammable liquids by hot surfaces. Fire
Technol 3(2):115-128.
Gordon, BF. 1981. Flame retardants and textile material. Fire Safety J 4:109-123.
Griffith, JF and JR Mullins. 1984. Ignition, self-heating, and the effects of added gases during
the thermal decomposition of di-t-butyl peroxide. Combust Flame 56(2):135.
Hanson, RJ and A Thomas. 1984. Flame development in swirling flows in closed vessels.
Combust Flame 55(3):255.
Harley, CS. 1991. Building and site planning for firesafety. In Fire Protection Handbook,
edited by AE Cote. Quincy, MA: NFPA.
Hilado, CJ. 1982. Flammability Handbook for Plastics. Lancaster, PA: Technomic Publishing.
Hilado, CJ and HJ Cumming. 1977. The HC value: A method of estimating the flammability
of mixtures of combustible gases. Fire Technol 13(3):195.
Hirschler, MM. 1992. Smoke and heat release and ignitability as measures of fire hazard from
burning of carpet tiles. Fire Safety J 18(4):305.
Hommel, G. 1987. Handbuch Der Gefhrlichen Gter. Berlin: Springer Verlag.
Ihrig, AM and SL Smith. 1994. The role of alkali and alkaline earth metal ions in cellulosic
smoldering. J Fire Sci 12(4):357.
Janssens, M. 1991. Piloted ignition of wood: A review. Fire Mater 15(4):151.
Karter, MJJ. 1991. Fire loss in the United States during 1990. NFPA J September/October:36.
Klote, JH. 1992. Design of Smoke Management Systems. Atlanta.
Martin, JT and B Miller. 1978. The thermal and flammability behaviour of polyester-wool
blends. Textile Res J 48:97-103.
Mizuno, T and K Kawagoe. 1986. Burning behaviour of upholstered chairs: Part 3, Flame
and plume characteristics in fire test. Fire Sci Technol 6(12):29.
Nagy, J, HG Dorset, and M Jacobson. 1964. Preventing Ignition of Dust Dispersions By
Inerting. Pittsburgh, PA: USDI, Bureau of Mines. (RI6543)
Franais