Abstract

The effects of air intake position on the burning behaviour of liquid pool inside a mechanically ventilated compartment are analyzed by using both an experiment and a physics-based model. A series of compartment fire experiments has been undertaken from a reduced scale enclosure with a length/height and width of 2 m. An external ventilation system consists of an air admission duct placed in low or high position inside the compartment, providing an Air Change Per Hour (ACPH) in a range from 1 to 4. Lowering the inlet duct enhances fuel-air mixing in the compartment. The experimental and numerical studies highlight a faster fire growth for a low air intake with a rise of ACPH, implying more dangerous fire with regarding the more important peak in heat release rate and heat feedback to liquid fuel surface. For air intake in high position, the direction of air jet inside enclosure is found to be orthogonal to the direction of the buoyancy-induced flow. This results in an air entrainment restriction towards the fire base and a decrease of the heat feedback to liquid fuel surface due to cooling effect on the hot smoke layer near the ceiling. Thus a high inlet contributes to a reduction by a factor of 40% in HRR, and the fire growth power is practically independent to ACPH. Moreover, for a high inlet, fire exhaust occurs more easily because both the heat feedback and air entrainment are weaker than these for a low inlet. As a consequence, changing air intake position from low to high leads to a change in fire regime from an under-ventilated fire to an over-ventilated one.

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