Ventilation effects on the thermal characteristics of fire spread modes in open-plan compartment fires

Abstract

Our understanding of fire behaviour and heating conditions for load-bearing structural elements was developed from an immense body of research in small under-ventilated compartment fires. Within the context of contemporary architecture, large open-plan compartments are commonplace, yet understanding of the first principles that define fire behaviour in such enclosures remains limited. Past experiments have revealed that fires in open-plan compartments exhibit three distinct fire spread modes: a fully-developed fire, a growing fire, and a travelling fire. This paper studies the thermal characteristics arising from these fire spread modes and the effects of the ventilation imposed. An experimental analysis of the energy distribution and spatial heating is conducted on a series of large-scale compartment fire tests, with the fire spread mode and ventilation conditions systematically varied. Each fire spread mode is shown to induce significant and characteristic spatial heat distributions. Moreover, the analysis of the ventilation modes shows equivalent thermal loads imposed on the structure in cases where the opening areas are large, and plume flows are dominant despite lower gas temperatures and irradiation. Thus, fires in open-plan compartments pose unique and possibly more severe thermal loading to structural systems, a characteristic not captured by current design fire methodologies

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