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Meeting of the UJNR Panel on Fire Research and Safety (15th). Held in San Antonio, Texas on March 1-7, 2000. Volume 1
It has been realized that the sublethal effects of smoke can affect survival in fires, but only sparse data were available on which to base fire safety decisions. A recent draft standard under consideration in the International Standards Organization Committee on Fire Safety has prompted an industry/government consortium to conduct research on the role of sublethal effects of smoke in evaluating building an/or product fire safety. This paper outlines the components of this high visibility and high potential impact study.
Meeting of the UJNR Panel on Fire Research and Safety (15th). Held in San Antonio, Texas on March 1-7, 2000. Volume 1
It has been realized that the sublethal effects of smoke can affect survival in fires, but only sparse data were available on which to base fire safety decisions. A recent draft standard under consideration in the International Standards Organization Committee on Fire Safety has prompted an industry/government consortium to conduct research on the role of sublethal effects of smoke in evaluating building an/or product fire safety. This paper outlines the components of this high visibility and high potential impact study.
Meeting of the UJNR Panel on Fire Research and Safety (15th). Held in San Antonio, Texas on March 1-7, 2000. Volume 1
S. L. Bryner (author)
2000
10 pages
Report
No indication
English
Building Industry Technology , Industrial Safety Engineering , Combustion & Ignition , Fire Services, Law Enforcement, & Criminal Justice , Meeting , Fire safety , Smoke , Sublethal effects , Toxicity , Survival , Evaluation , Buildings , Standards , Visibility , Impact , Government/industry relations