Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7049591 | Applied Thermal Engineering | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Experiments are conducted in a model tunnel to study the effect of a vehicular blockage at the upstream of the fire source on the buoyancy driven back-layering length and critical velocity in a longitudinal ventilated tunnel. The relative distance between the vehicular blockage and fire source are ranged in 1 m â¼Â 6 m. It is found that with no blockage, experimental data on back-layering length and critical velocity can be well collapsed by Wu model and Li model, respectively. However, with the increase in blockage-fire distance, both the back-layering length and critical velocity first decrease then approach to constants similar to those with no blockage. The modified Wu model and Li model amended by cross-sectional blockage ratio proposed by Lee, which does not include the factor of blockage-fire distance, still fail to predict experimental results for different blockage-fire distances. Thus a dimensionless modification coefficient η is proposed and correlated non-dimensionally with the normalized blockage-fire distance to account for this effect. Finally, global models are proposed to predict back-layering length and critical velocity including factors of both cross-sectional blockage ratio and blockage-fire distance, which are shown to well collapse the experimental measurements in good agreement.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
W. Tang, L.H. Hu, L.F. Chen,