Abstract

Sprinkler activation is one of the key events defining the course of a compartment fire. The time when activation occurs is commonly used in the determination of the design fire scenario, which is the cornerstone of the design of building fire safety features. A well-known model of sprinkler activation (response time index (RTI) model) was introduced into the numerical scheme of the ANSYS Fluent computational fluid dynamics (CFD) package. The novel way in which the model is used is the calculation of the time for sprinkler activation within each discrete cell of the domain. The proposed novel approach was used in a case-study to assess the effects of comfort mode natural ventilation on a sprinkler’s activation pattern. It was found that hinged vents in the comfort mode had a significant effect on sprinkler activation, both in terms of delaying it as well as limiting the total number of cells in which the sprinkler would have activated. In some scenarios with a hinged vent, no activation was observed in the central point of the vent, possibly indicating problems with the autonomous triggering of the fire mode of such a device. It was also found that the RTI and C (related to the conductive transport of sprinkler fitting) parameter values had a moderate influence on sprinkler activation time—only for high-temperature sprinklers (≥ 141 °C). This study shows the applicability of the 3D activation time mapping for research focused on the fire safety of sprinkler-protected compartments and for the performance-based approach to sprinkler system design. Even though the RTI model is the industry standard for the determination of sprinkler response, the model implementation in ANSYS Fluent was not validated. This means that sources of uncertainty, mainly connected with the determination of flow velocity and temperature are not known, and the model should be used with caution. An in-depth validation is planned for subsequent studies.

Highlights

  • Sprinkler protection is paramount to the fire safety of buildings

  • The goal of this paper is to introduce a novel approach—the 3D mapping of sprinkler activation time

  • Sixsystem simulations were performed in which three fire scenarios (fires and two conditions of theventilation ventilation system(vents closed or open) were used

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Summary

Introduction

Sprinkler protection is paramount to the fire safety of buildings. With a notable mention of Early Suppression Fast Response sprinklers used in the highest risk industrial applications, must deliver large amounts of water as quickly as possible. The complex architecture of buildings and the use of ventilation systems could cause air flows that may adversely affect sprinkler activation time. If a sprinkler grid interacts with vents, design standards such as the NFPA 13 [1] or the. VdS 2815 guidance document [2] forbid the use of automatically-activated natural vents. Some law systems, such as the Polish building code, require the use of such a smoke ventilation system, leaving the responsibility of minimizing the adverse effects of ventilation on the system designer

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