Abstract

With climate change, complex fire scenarios at Wildland Urban Interfaces (WUI) have become a growing concern for authorities worldwide. Such scenarios involve unfavorable wind conditions, which greatly increase the fire spread near communities and makes the intervention of firefighters even more complex. To design effective fire safety regulations to protect communities, it is important to have a clear understanding of the role of wind in the burning of vegetation to help identify the vectors of fire spread within the defensible zone. In this context, this paper attempts to relate the properties of the flames generated by the burning of a reconstructed rockrose hedge to the atmospheric wind turbulence using four field-scale experiments. The experimental setup includes 3 visible cameras to record the flame geometry, extracted by post-processing; 3 pairs of radiant and total heat fluxes to record the heat fluxes downstream of the hedge, and an anemometer to measure the wind speed and direction. The results show that the wind at the experimental site is composed of wall-bounded turbulent structures coupled with strong and short intermittent events such as gusts. Regarding the fire, the four replicates show similarities in phase durations and dynamics, but revealed dependencies on Reynolds number and turbulent kinetic energy when averaging over the fully developed flame phase. In addition, a slight flapping motion of the ensemble flame was observed and associated with wave numbers of the order of the turbulent cascade in the kinetic energy power spectra. Finally, the analysis of wind and fire intermittencies revealed that strong and short wind events generate large fluctuations of flame geometry and received heat fluxes that increase with the characteristic time of the event considered.

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