Abstract

Temperature sensors with a communication capability can help monitor and report temperature values to a control station, which enables dynamic and real-time evacuation paths in fire emergencies. As compared to traditional approaches that identify a one-shot fire evacuation path, in this paper, we develop an intelligent algorithm that can identify time-aware and temperature-aware fire evacuation paths by considering temperature changes at different time slots in multi-story and multi-exit buildings. We first propose a method that can map three-dimensional multi-story multi-exit buildings into a two-dimensional graph. Then, a mathematical optimization model is proposed to capture this time-aware and temperature-aware evacuation path problem in multi-story multi-exit buildings. Six fire evacuation algorithms (BFS, SP, DBFS, TABFS, TASP and TADBFS) are proposed to identify the efficient evacuation path. The first three algorithms that do not address human temperature limit constraints can be used by rescue robots or firemen with fire-proof suits. The last three algorithms that address human temperature limit constraints can be used by evacuees in terms of total time slots and total temperature on the evacuation path. In the computational experiments, the open space building and the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall are all tested to verify the solution quality of these six algorithms. From the computational results, TABFS, TASP and TADBF identify almost the same evacuation path in open space building and the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall. BFS, SP DBFS can locate marginally better results in terms of evacuation time and total temperature on the evacuation path. When considering evacuating a group of evacuees, the computational time of the evacuation algorithm is very important in a time-limited evacuation process. Considering the extreme case of seven fires in eight emergency exits in the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall, the golden window for evacuation is 15 time slots. Only TABFS and TADBFS are applicable to evacuate 1200 people in the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall when one time slot is setting as one minute. The computational results show that the capacity limit for the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall is 800 people in the extreme case of seven fires. In this case, when the number of people in the building is less than 700, TADBFS should be adopted. When the number of people in the building is greater than 700, TABFS can evacuate more people than TADBFS. Besides identifying an efficient evacuation path, another significant contribution of this paper is to identify the best sensor density deployment at large buildings like the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall in considering the fire evacuation.

Highlights

  • Fire detection and evacuation are an important issue in today’s multi-floor building construction

  • Novel time and temperature aware evacuation path (TTAEP) model: We propose a rigorous mathematical model, TTAEP, to capture the evacuation path planning problem in the multi-story multi-exit building with addressing to the temperature changes in different time slots

  • These results show that the proposed algorithms (TASP, temperature aware best-first search (TABFS) and TABFS) can help to determine the best temperature sensor deployment density in the Taipei 101 Shopping Mall in considering the evacuee’s evacuation time and evacuation cost

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Summary

Introduction

Fire detection and evacuation are an important issue in today’s multi-floor building construction. The evacuation path should be adjusted to bypass the fire zone based on temperature data acquired by the sensors at the current time slot. Evacuation at large multi-floor buildings needs more time than the evacuation path algorithm should address the fire spreading on a timely basis This calls for a new three-dimensional evacuation path planning algorithm that can adapt its path based on most current temperature data from the sensors. The contribution of this paper is the proposed multi-time-slot-aware evacuation algorithm that can help the evacuees to evacuate in the most efficient way. By using the most recent sensed temperature data return from the sensors, the proposed algorithms identify the multi-staged evacuation path. The computational experiments of the proposed algorithms can help to determine the maximum people capacity in the building in considering the evacuation process

Related Works
Graph Mapping Scheme from Three-Dimension Building to Two-Dimension Graph
Solution Approaches
Computational Experiments
Conclusions
Full Text
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