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Characterization of highly under‐ventilated fires using the cone calorimeter
The cone calorimeter, originally designed with an ‘open configuration‘, may be used in combination with a closed‐combustion chamber in order to test specimens in oxygen‐depleted atmospheres (air vitiation effect) or in fuel‐rich combustion (ventilation effect). However, highly under‐ventilated conditions are not achievable, as a consequence of an overconsumption of oxygen due to the incomplete confinement of the flame and imperfections in the air tightness of the combustion volume. In this work, these issues were solved by lowering the combustion zone, in order to fit a 600 mm chimney on the top of the controlled‐atmosphere chamber, and further improving the sealing of the whole setup. n‐Heptane was used as a reference fuel, and its combustion properties were determined in under‐ventilated conditions. The yields of main combustion species correlated well with the global equivalence ratio, for values of Φ up to three. The use of a Fourier‐transform infrared spectrometer allowed further refinement of the total unburned‐fraction composition. The relative concentration of species like methane, ethylene, or acetylene was shown to be relatively constant over the range of under‐ventilated conditions. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Characterization of highly under‐ventilated fires using the cone calorimeter
The cone calorimeter, originally designed with an ‘open configuration‘, may be used in combination with a closed‐combustion chamber in order to test specimens in oxygen‐depleted atmospheres (air vitiation effect) or in fuel‐rich combustion (ventilation effect). However, highly under‐ventilated conditions are not achievable, as a consequence of an overconsumption of oxygen due to the incomplete confinement of the flame and imperfections in the air tightness of the combustion volume. In this work, these issues were solved by lowering the combustion zone, in order to fit a 600 mm chimney on the top of the controlled‐atmosphere chamber, and further improving the sealing of the whole setup. n‐Heptane was used as a reference fuel, and its combustion properties were determined in under‐ventilated conditions. The yields of main combustion species correlated well with the global equivalence ratio, for values of Φ up to three. The use of a Fourier‐transform infrared spectrometer allowed further refinement of the total unburned‐fraction composition. The relative concentration of species like methane, ethylene, or acetylene was shown to be relatively constant over the range of under‐ventilated conditions. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Characterization of highly under‐ventilated fires using the cone calorimeter
Fourneau, Charles (author) / Delvosalle, Christian (author) / Breulet, Hervé (author) / Brohez, Sylvain (author)
Fire and Materials ; 40 ; 434-444
2016-04-01
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Characterization of highly under‐ventilated fires using the cone calorimeter
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