Experimental and numerical studies on flame radius, temperature profile and heat flux of axi-symmetric ceiling fires under various sub-atmospheric pressures
{"title":"Experimental and numerical studies on flame radius, temperature profile and heat flux of axi-symmetric ceiling fires under various sub-atmospheric pressures","authors":"Yunsong Li, Xiepeng Sun, Yuhang Chen, Longhua Hu, Xiaolei Zhang","doi":"10.1016/j.ijthermalsci.2025.109697","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Previous studies concerning ceiling fires (fire source located on the ceiling) under normal atmospheric pressure. However, research exploring the behavior of ceiling fires under sub-atmospheric pressures, which may occur at high altitudes, remains absent. This study addresses this gap through experiments carried out in a variable atmospheric pressure chamber and numerical simulations. A horizontal mica plate was used as the ceiling, and numerical study was conducted to compare with the experimental data. Five atmospheric pressures (40, 55, 70, 85 and 100 kPa), various heat release rates, burner diameters and fuel types (methane and propane) were considered. Key parameters obtained included the flame radius, maximum flame thickness, temperature profile and total heat flux beneath the ceiling. Experimentally, the flame radius and maximum flame thickness were estimated based on 50 % flame appearance probability. Numerically, the flame radius was estimated by <span><math><mrow><mo>Δ</mo><mi>T</mi><mo>=</mo><mn>500</mn><mi>K</mi></mrow></math></span> (<span><math><mrow><mo>Δ</mo><mi>T</mi></mrow></math></span> is temperature rise above the ambient) in the isothermal-temperature profile. From the results, the flame radius (<span><math><mrow><msub><mi>R</mi><mi>f</mi></msub></mrow></math></span>) increases as atmospheric pressure decreases, with the maximum flame thickness being significantly smaller than the flame radius. Regarding the temperature profile, temperature rise remains nearly constant under various sub-atmospheric pressures in the near field of fire source, and it gradually increases as atmospheric pressure decreases in the far field. The heat flux in the near field of fire source decreases as atmospheric pressure decreases, and it increases as atmospheric pressure decreases in the far field. Then, the prediction models for the temperature rise and total heat flux profiles were obtained, both the non-dimensional temperature rise and heat flux under various sub-atmospheric pressures can be described well by using the flame radius as characteristic length. Additionally, the physical analysis of the air entrainment behavior of ceiling fires under sub-atmospheric pressures was conducted, and the rate of flame air entrainment decreases as atmospheric pressure decreases. Finally, a novel characteristic length <span><math><mrow><msub><mi>l</mi><mrow><mi>a</mi><mo>,</mo><mi>p</mi></mrow></msub><mo>=</mo><msup><mrow><mo>(</mo><mrow><mover><mi>Q</mi><mo>˙</mo></mover><mo>/</mo><mrow><mo>(</mo><mrow><mrow><mo>(</mo><mrow><mn>0.48</mn><msup><mi>P</mi><mo>∗</mo></msup><mo>+</mo><mn>0.52</mn></mrow><mo>)</mo></mrow><mrow><mo>(</mo><mrow><mo>Δ</mo><msub><mi>H</mi><mi>c</mi></msub><mo>/</mo><mi>s</mi></mrow><mo>)</mo></mrow></mrow><mo>)</mo></mrow></mrow><mo>)</mo></mrow><mrow><mn>1</mn><mo>/</mo><mn>2</mn></mrow></msup></mrow></math></span> (where <span><math><mrow><mover><mi>Q</mi><mo>˙</mo></mover></mrow></math></span> is the heat release rate, <span><math><mrow><msup><mi>P</mi><mo>∗</mo></msup></mrow></math></span> is the atmospheric pressure normalized to 100 kPa, <span><math><mrow><mo>Δ</mo><msub><mi>H</mi><mi>c</mi></msub></mrow></math></span> is heat of combustion of fuel, and <em>s</em> is the stoichiometric air-to-fuel mass ratio) was proposed, and the flame radius was demonstrated proportional to <span><math><mrow><msub><mi>l</mi><mrow><mi>a</mi><mo>,</mo><mi>p</mi></mrow></msub></mrow></math></span>. This is a supplement of the fundamentals and hazard characteristics of ceiling fires under various sub-atmospheric pressures.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":341,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Thermal Sciences","volume":"211 ","pages":"Article 109697"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Thermal Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1290072925000201","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, MECHANICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Previous studies concerning ceiling fires (fire source located on the ceiling) under normal atmospheric pressure. However, research exploring the behavior of ceiling fires under sub-atmospheric pressures, which may occur at high altitudes, remains absent. This study addresses this gap through experiments carried out in a variable atmospheric pressure chamber and numerical simulations. A horizontal mica plate was used as the ceiling, and numerical study was conducted to compare with the experimental data. Five atmospheric pressures (40, 55, 70, 85 and 100 kPa), various heat release rates, burner diameters and fuel types (methane and propane) were considered. Key parameters obtained included the flame radius, maximum flame thickness, temperature profile and total heat flux beneath the ceiling. Experimentally, the flame radius and maximum flame thickness were estimated based on 50 % flame appearance probability. Numerically, the flame radius was estimated by ( is temperature rise above the ambient) in the isothermal-temperature profile. From the results, the flame radius () increases as atmospheric pressure decreases, with the maximum flame thickness being significantly smaller than the flame radius. Regarding the temperature profile, temperature rise remains nearly constant under various sub-atmospheric pressures in the near field of fire source, and it gradually increases as atmospheric pressure decreases in the far field. The heat flux in the near field of fire source decreases as atmospheric pressure decreases, and it increases as atmospheric pressure decreases in the far field. Then, the prediction models for the temperature rise and total heat flux profiles were obtained, both the non-dimensional temperature rise and heat flux under various sub-atmospheric pressures can be described well by using the flame radius as characteristic length. Additionally, the physical analysis of the air entrainment behavior of ceiling fires under sub-atmospheric pressures was conducted, and the rate of flame air entrainment decreases as atmospheric pressure decreases. Finally, a novel characteristic length (where is the heat release rate, is the atmospheric pressure normalized to 100 kPa, is heat of combustion of fuel, and s is the stoichiometric air-to-fuel mass ratio) was proposed, and the flame radius was demonstrated proportional to . This is a supplement of the fundamentals and hazard characteristics of ceiling fires under various sub-atmospheric pressures.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Thermal Sciences is a journal devoted to the publication of fundamental studies on the physics of transfer processes in general, with an emphasis on thermal aspects and also applied research on various processes, energy systems and the environment. Articles are published in English and French, and are subject to peer review.
The fundamental subjects considered within the scope of the journal are:
* Heat and relevant mass transfer at all scales (nano, micro and macro) and in all types of material (heterogeneous, composites, biological,...) and fluid flow
* Forced, natural or mixed convection in reactive or non-reactive media
* Single or multi–phase fluid flow with or without phase change
* Near–and far–field radiative heat transfer
* Combined modes of heat transfer in complex systems (for example, plasmas, biological, geological,...)
* Multiscale modelling
The applied research topics include:
* Heat exchangers, heat pipes, cooling processes
* Transport phenomena taking place in industrial processes (chemical, food and agricultural, metallurgical, space and aeronautical, automobile industries)
* Nano–and micro–technology for energy, space, biosystems and devices
* Heat transport analysis in advanced systems
* Impact of energy–related processes on environment, and emerging energy systems
The study of thermophysical properties of materials and fluids, thermal measurement techniques, inverse methods, and the developments of experimental methods are within the scope of the International Journal of Thermal Sciences which also covers the modelling, and numerical methods applied to thermal transfer.