Ignition limits of pine wood building material under the coupling effects of thermal radiation and cross winds
Journal of Building Engineering, ISSN: 2352-7102, Vol: 96, Page: 110576
2024
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Article Description
The ignition of timber buildings in the context of wildland-urban interface (WUI) fires has emerged as a significant challenge amidst the backdrop of global climate change. However, to the best knowledge of the authors, little attention was paid to the ignition conditions of wood building materials in WUI fires especially in thermal-fluid coupling environments. This study experimentally investigated the smoldering and flaming ignition characteristics of wood under the coupling effects of thermal radiation and cross winds. Surface temperature, internal temperature, mass loss rates, and time to ignition of wood samples were measured to study their variation with the above factors and the threshold between smoldering and flaming ignition phenomena. The results showed that wood exhibited reduced susceptibility to flaming ignition under low radiant heat flux conditions, and the introduction of cross winds posed more challenges for flaming ignition. In addition, both the critical surface temperature and mass loss rate varied with radiant heat flux and cross-wind speeds, so it was not feasible to determine the occurrence of flaming ignition by any of the two factors directly. This is because the coupling effects of thermal radiation and cross winds would result in a competition between radiant heating and convective cooling on wood surfaces. In light of this fact, two dimensionless quantities, namely Damköhler number and heat transfer ratio, were introduced to distinguish between smoldering and flaming ignitions. Damköhler number was used as an indicator of the potential for gas-phase flaming ignition, while the heat transfer ratio, namely the ratio of convective heat loss to radiant heat flux, was used to measure the net thermal energy received by wood surfaces. It has been demonstrated that the two quantities were effective to distinguish between smoldering and flaming ignitions from the perspectives of gas and solid phases with 20–40 kW/m 2 in radiant heat flux and 0–1.0 m/s in cross-wind speed. The data and theories disclosed in this study could help predict the ignition behaviors of timber buildings under thermal-fluid coupling conditions, thus providing useful guidance for WUI fire mitigation and control.
Bibliographic Details
Elsevier BV
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