Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios

Fully or partially sealing the openings of tunnels to accelerate the self-extinction of fires provides a promising firefighting tactic to beat large fires in a long tunnel. So far, most experimental studies on the characteristics of fire with different sealing ratios have been conducted in reduced-s...

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Main Authors: Ling Chen, Xuan Wang, Baiyi Li, Peng Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-02-01
Series:Fire
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/6/3/92
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author Ling Chen
Xuan Wang
Baiyi Li
Peng Lin
author_facet Ling Chen
Xuan Wang
Baiyi Li
Peng Lin
author_sort Ling Chen
collection DOAJ
description Fully or partially sealing the openings of tunnels to accelerate the self-extinction of fires provides a promising firefighting tactic to beat large fires in a long tunnel. So far, most experimental studies on the characteristics of fire with different sealing ratios have been conducted in reduced-scale tunnels. However, whether the findings in a reduced-scale tunnel can be converted to its full-scale prototype tunnel based on scaling laws has not yet been adequately studied. A series of experiments with heat-release rates of 15.8, 31.6 and 63.2 kW were conducted with sealing ratios ranging from 0% to 100% in a prototype tunnel measuring 20 m long, 0.9 m wide and 0.46 m high. The experimental results were compared with those from a 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel measuring 10 m long, 0.45 m wide and 0.23 m high. It showed that temperature rise along the tunnel in the 1/2 reduced-tunnel could be significantly underestimated. The differences in temperature rise increased monotonously with distance away from the fire seat, and they were as high as 70% at the tunnel portals, irrespective of the heat-release rates and sealing ratios. The study showed that the scale effect of fires was not sensitive to the Reynolds number of flows in tunnels. The minimal sealing ratio for the self-extinction of fires in the prototype tunnel was 85%, whilst it was 75% in the 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel, and the study revealed that the fires were much easier to extinguish in the 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel than those in the prototype tunnel, where the fires can sustain in a lower oxygen concentration. The study demonstrated that scaling laws could be invalid for tunnel fires with different sealing ratios and that results observed in reduced-scale tunnels should be further verified when applied to full-scale prototypes.
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spelling doaj.art-a9f9c7df7efc4dc09fa20741b7b647332023-11-17T11:03:23ZengMDPI AGFire2571-62552023-02-01639210.3390/fire6030092Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing RatiosLing Chen0Xuan Wang1Baiyi Li2Peng Lin3Sichuan Building Materials Industry & Fire Research Institute Co., Ltd., Chengdu 610000, ChinaDepartment of Fire Safety Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610000, ChinaSchool of Architecture and Design, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610000, ChinaDepartment of Fire Safety Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610000, ChinaFully or partially sealing the openings of tunnels to accelerate the self-extinction of fires provides a promising firefighting tactic to beat large fires in a long tunnel. So far, most experimental studies on the characteristics of fire with different sealing ratios have been conducted in reduced-scale tunnels. However, whether the findings in a reduced-scale tunnel can be converted to its full-scale prototype tunnel based on scaling laws has not yet been adequately studied. A series of experiments with heat-release rates of 15.8, 31.6 and 63.2 kW were conducted with sealing ratios ranging from 0% to 100% in a prototype tunnel measuring 20 m long, 0.9 m wide and 0.46 m high. The experimental results were compared with those from a 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel measuring 10 m long, 0.45 m wide and 0.23 m high. It showed that temperature rise along the tunnel in the 1/2 reduced-tunnel could be significantly underestimated. The differences in temperature rise increased monotonously with distance away from the fire seat, and they were as high as 70% at the tunnel portals, irrespective of the heat-release rates and sealing ratios. The study showed that the scale effect of fires was not sensitive to the Reynolds number of flows in tunnels. The minimal sealing ratio for the self-extinction of fires in the prototype tunnel was 85%, whilst it was 75% in the 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel, and the study revealed that the fires were much easier to extinguish in the 1/2 reduced-scale tunnel than those in the prototype tunnel, where the fires can sustain in a lower oxygen concentration. The study demonstrated that scaling laws could be invalid for tunnel fires with different sealing ratios and that results observed in reduced-scale tunnels should be further verified when applied to full-scale prototypes.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/6/3/92scale effectscaling lawself-extinction of firesealing ratiotunnel fire
spellingShingle Ling Chen
Xuan Wang
Baiyi Li
Peng Lin
Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
Fire
scale effect
scaling law
self-extinction of fire
sealing ratio
tunnel fire
title Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
title_full Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
title_fullStr Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
title_short Experimental Study of Scale Effect in Tunnel Fires at Different Sealing Ratios
title_sort experimental study of scale effect in tunnel fires at different sealing ratios
topic scale effect
scaling law
self-extinction of fire
sealing ratio
tunnel fire
url https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/6/3/92
work_keys_str_mv AT lingchen experimentalstudyofscaleeffectintunnelfiresatdifferentsealingratios
AT xuanwang experimentalstudyofscaleeffectintunnelfiresatdifferentsealingratios
AT baiyili experimentalstudyofscaleeffectintunnelfiresatdifferentsealingratios
AT penglin experimentalstudyofscaleeffectintunnelfiresatdifferentsealingratios