Heat Release Rate in Fire Title Cover

Burning Rate

Burning Rate Calculation

ṁ” = q̇”net/L

ṁ” is the burning rate per unit area (g/m2·s)
q̇”net is the net heat flux at the fuel surface (net heat flux, kW/m2)
L is the specific heat of gasification (Specific heat of gasification, kJ/g)

Specific Heat of Gasification (L) is the energy required for solid or liquid to change state into vapor. This heat value is a thermodynamic property for liquid fuels. For solid fuels, the heat value varies with time, such as wood, which becomes charcoal with thermal insulation properties during combustion. Therefore, the L value of solids is variable.

Higher L values are more difficult to burn than lower L values

Table: Heat of gasification values

Fuel

L (kJ/g)

Liquids:

Gasoline

0.33

Hexane

0.45

Heptane

0.5

Kerosene

0.67

Ethanol

1.00

Methanol

1.23

Thermoplastic:

Polyethylene

1.8 – 3.6

Polypropylene

2.0 – 3.1

Polymethylmethacrylate

1.6 – 2.8

Nylon 6/6

2.4 – 3.8

Polystyrene Foam

1.3 – 1.9

Flexible polyurethane Foam

1.2 – 2.7
Char Formers

Polyvinyl Chloride

1.7 – 2.5

Rigid Polyurethane Foam

1.2 – 5.3

Whitman Filter Paper no.3

3.6

Corrugated paper

2.2

Woods

4 – 6.5

  • The general burning rate of fuel ranges between 5~50 g/m2·s
  • If the burning rate is below 5 g/m2·s, combustion cannot continue
  • Maximum Burning Rate (Maximum Burning Rate)

Maximum burning rate is the limit value of each fuel type indicating how high it can burn. The maximum burning rate is obtained from actual fuel burning experiments under sufficient oxygen conditions (Fuel-limited combustion).

Table: Maximum burning flux values

Fuel

ṁ (g/m2·s)

Liquified propane 100-130
Liquified natural gas 80-100
Benzene 90
Butane 80
Hexane

70-80

Xylene

70

JP-4 50-70
Heptane 65-75
Gasoline 50-60
Acetone

40

Methanol 22
Polystyrene (granular) 38
Polymethyl methacrylate (granular)

28

Polyethylene (granular) 26
Polypropylene (granular)

24

Rigid Polyurethane foam 22-25
Flexible Polyurethane foam

21-27

Polyvinyl chloride (granular)

16

Corrugated paper cartons

14

Wood crib 11

Heat Release Rate (Heat Release Rate)

Heat Release Rate can be calculated from the fire combustion equation

Q̇ = ṁ”f AX∆HC

ṁ”f is the burning rate per unit area (g/m2·s)
Q̇ is the energy release rate (kW)
X is combustion efficiency ~60-70%
∆HC is the heat of combustion (Heat of combustion, kJ/g)

Table: Burning Rate per unit area and complete heat of combustion for various materials

Material

Tefl

∆HC

Aliphatic Carbon-Hydrogen Atoms

Polyethylene

0.026

43.6

Polypropylene

0.024

43.4

Heavy Fuel oil (2.6-23 m)

0.036

——

Kerosene (30-80 m)

0.065

44.1

Crude oil (6.5-31 m)

0.056 ——

n-Dodecane (0.94)

0.036

44.2

Gasoline (1.5-223 m)

0.062

——

JP-4 (1-5.3 m)

0.067

——

JP-5 (0.6-1.7 m) 0.055 ——
n-Heptane (1.2-10 m)

0.075

44.6

n-Hexane (0.75-10 m)

0.077

44.8

Transformer fluids (2.37 m)

0.025-0.030

——

Aromatic Carbon-Hydrogen Atoms

Polystyrene (0.93 m) 0.034

39.2

Xylene (1.22 m)

0.067

39.4

Benzene (0.75-6.0 m) 0.081

40.1

Aliphatic Carbon-Hydrogen-Oxygen Atoms

Polyoxymethylene

0.016

15.4

Polymethylmethacrylate, PMMA (2.37 m)

0.03

25.2

Methanol (1.2-2.4 m)

0.025

20

Acetone (1.52 m)

0.038

29.7

Aliphatic Carbon-Hydrogen-Oxygen-Nitrogen Atoms

Flexible Polyurethane foams

0.021-0.027

23.2-27.2

Rigid Polyurethane foams

0.022-0.025

25.0-28.0

Aliphatic Carbon-Hydrogen-Halogen Atoms

Polyvinylchloride

0.016

16.4

Tefzel (ETHE)

0.014

12.6

Teflon (FEP)

0.007

4.8

Table: Effective heat of combustion

Fuel

∆HC (kJ/g)

Methane

50

Ethane

47.5

Ethene

50.4

Propane

46.5

Carbon monoxide

10.1

N-butane

45.7

c-Hexane

43.8

Heptane

44.6

Gasoline

43.7

Kerosene

43.2

Benzene

40

Acetone

30.8

Ethanol

26.8

Methanol

19.8

Polyethylene

43.3

Polypropylene

43.3

Polystyrene

39.8

Polycarbonate

29.7

Nylon 6/6

29.6

Polymethyl methacrylate

24.9

Polyvinyl chloride

16.4

Cellulose

16.1

Glucose

15.4

Wood

13-15

Table A.8.2.6 Unit Heat Release Rate for Commodities

Commodity

Heat Release Rate
(kW per m2 of floor area)*

Wood pallets, stacked 0.46 m high (6%-12% moisture)

1,420

Wood pallets, stacked 1.52 m high (6%-12% moisture)

4,000

Wood pallets, stacked 3.05 m high (6%-12% moisture)

6,800

Wood pallets, stacked 4.88 m high (6%-12% moisture)

10,200

Mail bags, Filled, Stacked 1.52 m high

400

Cartons, Compartmented, Stacked 4.5 m high

1,700

PE letter trays, filled, stacked 1.5 high on cart

8,500

PE trash barrels in cartons, stacked 4.5 high

2,000

FRP shower stalls in cartons, stacked 4.6 high

1,400

PE bottles packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 high

6,200

PE bottles in cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

2,000

PU insulation boards, rigid foam, stacked 4.2 high

1,900

PS jars packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

14,200

PS tubs nested in cartons, stack 4.2 m high

5,400

PS toy parts in cartons, stacked 4.2 high

2,000

PS insulation board, rigid foam, stacked 4.2 m high

3,300

PVC bottles packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

3,400

PP tubs packed In compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

4,400

PP and PE film in rolls, stacked 4.1 m high

6,200

Methyl Alcohol

740

Gasoline

2,500

Kerosene

1,700

Fuel oil. No. 2

1,700

Pool Fire Burning Rate

Pool Fire Burning Rate

ṁ” = ṁ”(1-e-kßD)

ṁ” is the burning rate of the fire pool (g/m2•s)
ṁ”is the asymptotic burning rate of the fire pool (g/m2•s)
kß is the fire parameter depending on fuel type (m-1)
D is the diameter of the fire pool (m)
Deq = √4A/π

Graph of pool fire burning rate versus pool fire diameter

Image - Graph of pool fire burning rate versus pool fire diameter

Image - Characteristics of Pool Fire

Image - Characteristics of Pool Fire Source: https://pubs.acs.org

Table: Burning Rate of Pool Fire

Material

Density (kg/m3) ṁ” (kg/m2s) ∆HC (MJ/kg)

kß (m-1)

Cryogenics

Liquid H2

70

0.017 120

6.1

LNG (mostly CH4)

415

0.078 50

1.1

LPG (mostly C3H8)

585

0.099 46

1.4

Alcohols

Methanol (CH3OH)

796

0.017 20

a

Ethanol (C2H5OH)

794

0.015 26.8

b

Simple Organic Fuels

Butane (C4H10)

573

0.078 45.7

2.7

Benzene (C6H6)

874

0.085 40.1

2.7

Hexane (C6H14)

650

0.074 44.7

1.9

Heptane (C7H16)

675

0.101 44.6

1.1

Xylene (C8H10)

870

0.09 40.8

1.4

Acetone (C3H6O)

791

0.041 25.8

1.9

Dioxane (C4H8O2)

1035

0.018 26.2

5.4b

Diethyl ether (C4H10O)

714

0.085 34.2

0.7

Petroleum Products

Benzine

740

0.048 44.7

3.6

Gasoline

740

0.055 43.7

2.1

Kerosene

820

0.039b 43.2

3.5

JP-4

760

0.051 43.5

3.6

JP-5

810

0.054 43

1.6

Transformer Oil, Hydrocarbon

760

0.039 46.4

0.7

Fuel oil, heavy

940-1000

0.035 39.7

1.7

Crude oil

830-880

0.022-0.045 42.5-42.7

2.8

Solids

Polymethylmethacrylate (C5H8O2)n

1184

0.02 24.9

3.3

Polypropylene (C3H6)n

905

0.018 43.2

Polystyrene (C8H8)n

1050

0.034 39.7

a Value independent of diameter in turbulent regime

b Estimate uncertain, since only two points available

Example 1

An accident caused 20 liters of transformer oil to spill over an area of approximately 2 square meters. The oil caught fire. Calculate the Energy Release rate and the burning duration.

Solution

From the Pool Fire table for Transformer oil:

ρ = 760 kg/m3 ṁ”= 0.039 kg/m3•s kß = 0.7 m-1 ∆Hc = 46.4 MJ/kg

Calculate D from a circle with area equal to 2 square meters

D = Deq = √4A/π = √4×2/π = 1.6 m

The energy release rate of transformer oil per unit area equals

ṁ” = 0.038 x (1- e-(0.7×1.6)) = 0.026 kg/m2•s

Total energy release rate equals

Q̇ = ṁ”f AX∆HC = (0.026)(2)(0.7)(46.4) = 1.69 MW

Total burning rate ṁ = Aṁ” = 0.052 kg/s

Total mass of spilled Transformer oil m = ρV = 760(20×10-3) = 15.2 kg

Total burning duration t = m/ṁ = 15.2/0.052 = 292 s ≈ min

Estimating Energy Release Rate from Actual Fuel Combustion

Estimating energy release rate through actual fuel combustion is practically tested using equipment called Oxygen Consumption Calorimeter (Cone Calorimeter) or Furniture Calorimeter

Method of Measuring Energy Release Rate using Cone Calorimeter

Cone Calorimeter Test is a device that measures heat quantity according to Cone Calorimeter testing theory, based on the principle that calories burned correlate with oxygen consumption. Using 1 g of oxygen generates 13.1 kJ of heat.

Cone Calorimeter

Image - Cone Calorimeter

Method of Measuring Energy Release Rate using Furniture Calorimeter Test

Furniture Calorimeter Test is a large device that uses the same principle as the Cone Calorimeter but has a larger cone and is used for burning various furniture items.

T-Square Fire

T-square fire refers to the period from when an object ignites (Growth Phase) where combustion spreads rapidly in proportion to time squared (T-square).

Q̇ = αt2

Q̇ is the energy release rate (kW)
α is the Growth Factor (kW/s2)
t is the combustion time starting from when the object ignites (s)

Growth Factor α
tg is the time from when an object starts burning until it can release 1000 kW of heat energy where

α = 1000/tg2

is an index indicating the fire spread rate of each fuel type

NFPA 204 Standard for smoke and heat ventilating has classified Growth Factor into 4 levels

Table: Fire Spread Speed Classification

Class

Time to Reach 1000 kW (s)

Ultra-fast

75

Fast

150

Medium

300

Slow

600

Conceptual Illustration of Continuous Growth Fire

Image - T-Square Fire

growth factor NFPA 204

Image - Growth Factor

Rates of Energy Release for t squared Fire

Image - Rate of Energy Release for t-square Fire

Each fuel type has different Growth factor values

Table: Growth Factor α values

Fuel

Growth Time (s)

Wood pallets, stacked 0.46 m high (6%-12% moisture)

160-320

Wood pallets, stacked 1.52 m high (6%-12% moisture)

90-190

Wood pallets, stacked 3.05 m high (6%-12% moisture)

80-120

Wood pallets, stacked 4.88 m high (6%-12% moisture)

75-120

Mail bags, Filled, Stacked 1.52 m high

190

Paper, Vertical rolls, stacked 6.10 m high

60

Cotton (also PE, PE/cot acrylic/nylon/PE), garments in 3.66 m high rack

17-28

Cartons, Compartmented, Stacked 4.57 m high

22-43

“Ordinary Combustibles” rack storage, 4.57 m – 9.14 m high

40-270

Paper products, densely packed in cartons, rack storage, 6.10 m high

470

PE letter trays, filled, stacked 1.52 high on cart

180

PE trash barrels in cartons, stacked 4.57 high

55

FRP shower stalls in cartons, stacked 4.57 high

85

PE bottles packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.57 high

85

PE bottles packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.57 high

75

PE pallets, stacked 0.91 m high

150

PE pallets, stacked 1.83 m-2.44 m high

32-57

PU mattress, single, horizontal

120

PU insulation boards, rigid foam, stacked 4.57 high

8

PS jars packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

55

PS tubs nested in cartons, stack 4.2 m high

110

PS toy parts in cartons, stacked 4.2 high

120

PS insulation board, rigid foam, stacked 4.2 m high

7

PVC bottles packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

9

PP tubs packed in compartmented cartons, stacked 4.5 m high

25-40

PP and PE film in rolls, stacked 4.1 m high

40

Distilled spirits in barrels, stacked 6.10 m high

25-40

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