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 ∼ 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.
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