Javascript är disabled Dokumentsida - Bibliotek - MSB RIB
Effect of Water on Piloted Ignition of Cellulosic Materials
Författare
Abu-Zaid M, Atreya A
Utgivare
US Department of Commerce
Utgivningsår
1989-02
This experimental study is an attempt to quantify the effect of water on extinguishment; thermal decomposition and piloted ignition of wood. In the extinguishment part cooling of hot porous and non-porous ceramic solids by water droplets was studied. These solids were used to simulate low thermal diffusivity porous and nonporous combustible building materials and were instrumented by several surface and in-depth thermocouples. Temperature measurements in the solid were used to quantify the heat transfer during droplet evaporation. Thermal decomposition of wood in air was also studied as a function of sample moisture content and externally applied radiation prior to the ignition experiments. Piloted ignition experiments were conducted on Douglas fir for four different moisture contents and at different levels of externally applied radiation. It was found that the presence of moisture increases the ignition time, surface temperature and the evolved mass flux at ignition. A single equation was derived to correlate all the ignition data. This correlation accounts for the moisture dependent thermal properties and the heat loss from the sample surface.