0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views19 pages

Fire Protection Engineering Principles

This document discusses the characteristics of fire plumes, including: - The structure of fire plumes, which consist of a smoke zone, intermittent flame zone, and persistent flame zone. - Key characteristics of fire plumes like height of flames, temperatures and velocities, entrainment of air, and rise of the plume front. - The concept of the virtual origin of fire plumes, which accounts for the heat generation not being a single point. Equations are provided to calculate the virtual origin based on heat release rate and diameter of the fire source. - Entrainment of air into the fire plume based on equations involving heat release rate, elevation above the virtual origin, and mass
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views19 pages

Fire Protection Engineering Principles

This document discusses the characteristics of fire plumes, including: - The structure of fire plumes, which consist of a smoke zone, intermittent flame zone, and persistent flame zone. - Key characteristics of fire plumes like height of flames, temperatures and velocities, entrainment of air, and rise of the plume front. - The concept of the virtual origin of fire plumes, which accounts for the heat generation not being a single point. Equations are provided to calculate the virtual origin based on heat release rate and diameter of the fire source. - Entrainment of air into the fire plume based on equations involving heat release rate, elevation above the virtual origin, and mass
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 19

Fire

Protection
Module 1
Engineering
Knowing the fire
Principles
Characteristics of the
Fire Plumes
• Height of flames
• Plumes
temperatures and
Content velocities
• Entrainment air into
the fire plume
• Rise of plume front
• Horizontal flame jets
Fire plume
Smoke zone

Intermittent
flame zone

Persistent flame
zone
The fire plume of a gas pool (2.43 m in diameter). The arrows indicate the air
drag inside the plume. This drag provides the oxygen needed for combustion,
but also dilutes and cools fire products, thus increasing smoke production.

https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-fire-plume-of-a-gasoline-pool-243-m-diameter-72-The-arrows-indicate-the_fig5_337101866
Flame height

Intermittent
flame zone
2
L  0.235Q

5
 1.02 D (m)

Q Flame height
Continuous
flame zone Where 50% of the
time persists

Lozano & Asociados 5


Works out?
The heat generation rate for
gasoline per unit area is 2400
kW/m2
(Principles of Fire Behavior, James G. Quintiere)

Tray diameter 2.43 m.


 D2  (2.43) 2
A   4.64 m 2
4 4

Q  A  q  4.64  2400  11.136 kW

2
L  0.235Q 5
 1.02 D (m) L=0.235(11.136) 2/5  1.02(2.43)  7.29 m

L = 7.29 m
Lozano & Asociados 6
Is the result reasonable?
2.43

2.43 7.29

2.43

Lozano & Asociados 7


Virtual origin of gas plume

Outline

Air
Air Air

Air

Point of the origin of Virtual source of power


power generation. generation. When heat
generation is not a point

Lozano & Asociados 8


Characteristics of the gas plume

Entrainment
airflow
Speed
profile

Flames

Lozano & Asociados 9


The virtual origin of the plume
2
Z 0  0.083Q 5
 1.02 D  m
Z
Gas temperature and velocity in the
center of the plume
Tg ΔT0=Tg-T∞

 C, K 
2 5
U0 T0  25Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3 0 o

Air T∞ 1 1
U 0  1.03Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3
m / s
Qc is the convective heat rate in kW

L Qc  X r Q X r  0.6 a 0.8

Z0 There are negative Z0 values for low HRR fires


and large diameters. Positive values are often
D Virtual Origin found in high heat release fires.

G Heskestad, SFPE Handbook Lozano & Asociados 10


The virtual origin
You want to know the virtual origin of the flames of a fire 1.5 m
in diameter of methyl alcohol that generates 500 kW/m2.

Let's get to know the fire first, determine the heat release rate and then
the average height of the flames:
   (1.5) 2
Z Q  A q   500  884 kW
4
2
L  0.235Q 5
 1.02 D (m)
2.02 m

Ø 1.5 m
L  0.235(884) 2/5  1.02(1.5)  2.02 m
-0.28 m 2
Z 0  0.083Q 5
 1.02 D  m
Origen virtual
2
Z 0  0.083(884) 5  1.02(1.5)   0.28 m

Lozano & Asociados 11


The virtual origin
You want to know the virtual origin of the flames of a fire 1.5 m
in diameter of heptane that release 2500 kW/m2.
Let's get to know the fire first, determine the heat generation rate and
then the average height of the flames:

Z
   (1.5) 2
Q  A q   2500  4420 kW
4
2
L  0.235Q 5
 1.02 D (m)

Ø 1.5 m
0.85 m L  0.235(4420)2/5  1.02(1.5)  5.21 m
2
Virtual origin Z 0  0.083Q 5
 1.02 D m
2
Z 0  0.083(4420) 5  1.02(1.5)  0.85 m

Lozano & Asociados 12


Entrainment air
me  0.071Qc1/3 ( Z  Z 0 )5/3  1  0.027Qc2/3 (Z  Z 0 )5/3 
Z (Hosser 2013, Kucera 2009, Heskestad 1984.)

For Z values above the


Tg flames
Air me a T∞
U0

The mass flow at a particular


elevation is assumed to be
entirely due to entrainment
L air by the low contribution of
the fire itself.
Z0
D Virtual Origin

G Heskestad, SFPE Handbook Lozano & Asociados 13


Let's follow the example!
2
Z 0  0.083Q 5
 1.02 D  m
Z0  0.083(11.136) 2/5  1.02(2.43)  0.971 m

Gas temperature and velocity in the


center of the plume

 C, K 
2 5
T0  25Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3 0 o

Z0
1 1
U 0  1.03Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3
m / s

Qc  0.7  Q  0.7 11.136  7795.2 kW

Lozano & Asociados 14


Can we know the temperature and velocity
of the gases at 15 m high?

 C, oK 
2 5
T0  25Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3 0

1 1
U 0  1.03Qc 3
 Z  Z0  3
m / s
Qc  0.7  Q  0.7  11.136  7795.2 kW

15 m

 120.4  0C , o K 
2 5
T0  25(7795.2) 3
15  0.971 3

1 1
U 0  1.03(7795.2) 3
15  0.971 3
 8.47  m / s 
30.5 km/h
Z0  0.971 m

Lozano & Asociados 15


Calculation of entrainment air
me  0.071Qc1/3 ( Z  Z 0 )5/3  1  0.027Qc2/3 (Z  Z 0 )5/3 
Z (Hosser 2013, Kucera 2009, Heskestad 1984.)

For Z values above the


Tg flames
Air me a T∞
U0

The mass flow at a particular


elevation is assumed to be
entirely due to air
L ientrainment by the low
contribution of the fire itself.
Z0
D Origen Virtual

G Heskestad, SFPE Handbook Lozano & Asociados 16


Calculation of entrainet airflow
at a height of 15 m
me  0.071Qc1/3 ( Z  Z 0 )5/3  1  0.027Qc2/3 (Z  Z 0 )5/3 
Z
Qc  7795.2 kW
Tg Z0  0.971 m
me  0.071(7795.2)1/3 (15  0.971)5/3 
U0
[1  0.027(7795.2)2/3 (15  0.971)5/3 ]
Aire me me  129.84 kg/s
a T∞
The mass flow at a particular
L elevation is assumed to be
entirely due to the induced air.
Z0 Given the little more
D contribution of the fire itself.
Origen Virtual

G Heskestad, SFPE Handbook Lozano & Asociados 17


Rise of plume front

Measurements made by Professor Tanaka


of the rise time of the front of the plume
for a stable state fire have been
represented by Heskestad in the
following formula:

z
t R*  0.46
t R*  [ g / (C pT  )]1/3 Qc1/3 z 4/3t R

Lozano & Asociados 18


Rise of plume front
Let's look at an example:
A fire of 100 kW, determine the time it
took to reach the front of hot gases at a
height of 30 m.

t R*  0.46
t R*  [ g / (C pT   )]1/3 Qc1/3 z 4/3t R
30 m
Despejando t R
t R  0.46[ g / (C pT   )]1/3 Qc1/3 z 4/3
C p  1 kJ/Kg.K T  2930 K   1.2 kg/m3
Q=100 kW QC  0.7x100= 70 kW

t R  0.46[9.81/ (1 293  1.2)1/3  701/3  304/3  34 s

Lozano & Asociados 19

You might also like