Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4920946 | Fire Safety Journal | 2017 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Fire suppression experiments were conducted to determine the critical delivered fluxes (CDFs) of representative fuels. The objective was to evaluate the CDF-based commodity classification for sprinkler protection purposes with emphasis on the effects of storage height. The experiments were carried out in 2- and 5-tier double-row, rack storage configurations, which, together with previous 3-tier work, provide a complete set of CDF measurements at different storage heights. The experimental results show that the 5-tier CDFs correlate well with full-scale sprinkler testing experiences. The comparison of CDFs also reveals the storage height effects for different fuels: the CDF values scale linearly for the cartoned commodities, while nonlinearities are observed for the uncartoned plastic commodities. Based on these results, a commodity classification method is proposed to assess solid combustible materials in the real world with separate treatment of cartoned and uncartoned fuels.
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Authors
Yibing Xin,