Abstract
ABSTRACT This study is part of an ongoing project on modeling vegetation fires and their impacts on dwellings at wildland-urban interfaces. As a first step, fire tests were conducted at laboratory scale on both wooden wool litter and rockrose non-natural hedge. To this end, a 0.5 m x 0.5 m x 1 m hedge reconstituted from rockrose branches was burned under a Large Scale Heat Release (LSHR) apparatus. A litter of wooden wool was used before and under the hedge to mimic an ignition from an underneath burning herbaceous layer. These fire tests provided experimental data for mass loss and heat release rate, which were used as a basis for comparison with the simulations performed by using the Wildland-urban interface Fire Dynamics Simulator (WFDS). To numerically model the rockrose hedge, the distribution of the different particle classes (leaves, twigs of various diameters) was determined as well as their physicochemical properties. The comparison of the experimental data and predicted quantities showed a good agreement, whether for wooden wool burnings alone or mixed wooden wool and rockrose hedge.
Published Version
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