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Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr. Anja Hofmann BAM Department VII Safety in Structures Division Fire Engineering By Rudi Borms member of the exec. comm. of EFRA Project sponsored by EFRA Budapest June 14th-15th 2007
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Page 1: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit ofSmoke Detectors and Flame Retardants

Reporting of a study made by Dr. Anja Hofmann

BAMDepartment VII Safety in StructuresDivision Fire Engineering

By Rudi Bormsmember of the exec. comm.of EFRA

Project sponsored by EFRA

Budapest June 14th-15th 2007

Page 2: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

2

• Hazardous home fires: 80 % of all fire fatalities in homes

• Fire spread is very fast: only 2 to 4 minutes escape time after fire detection, earlier tests in 1970s described longer escape times.

• Different concepts in Europe to minimise fire losses: Smoke detectors and flame retardants

European Home Fires

Page 3: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

3

Smoke Detectors / Flame Retardants

• Valuable to wake and warn sleeping persons

• Escape time (2 to 4 minutes) is very short , especially for very young, older or disabled persons

• Batteries have to be changed regularly

• Flame retardants lead in general to later (or no) ignition and lower the heat release rate of the burning item

• Only several items of furniture are equipped with flame retardants (e.g. upholstery or television sets)

Page 4: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

4

High Risk Items

• Upholstery: a single item could cause flashover in a room

• TV: 2 to 3 min to peak of HRR, lot of smoke (faster development than refrigerator/washing machine, lower peak)

• Toys: easy ignition with lighter after 1 to 3 sec, burning for up to 25 min

Page 5: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

5

Experimental Data

• NIST study about smoke detector performance (2004)

• Experimental studies, e.g. Babrauskas (1988), CBUF, Hirschler, Troitzsch (1998), LCA (2000 - 2003)

• Fire test of the Berlin fire service (2005)

• Fire test of BAM / Berlin fire service (2006)

Validation

Time to Flashover:

2 - 17 min. (Non-FR)

20 min - ∞ (FR)

HRR for single items, e.g. upholstery, TV sets

10:30 min (Non-FR)

4:00 min (Non-FR)

Page 6: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

6

CFD (Computional Fluid Dynamics)

• Field model: room is divided into cells (FVM)• Balances of mass, momentum, energy• Submodels: chemical reaction, radiation, soot, turbulence; and

material parameters

• Furniture with and without flame retardants• Different home geometries, closed and open windows• Smoke detectors

Results: temperatures, velocities, gas concentrations in the room, smoke production and smoke movement

Page 7: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

7

Validation: Manufactured House

Page 8: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

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Validation A1: Given HRRHeat release rate of flaming chair:

(not completely consumed by fire)

Chair heat release rate

0

40

80

120

160

0 50 100 150 200 250

time [s]

Hea

t re

leas

e ra

te [

kW]

Submodels / input data:

• Chemical reaction

• Smoke production

• Radiation

• Turbulence

• Material properties for upholstery

Page 9: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

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Validation A1: Given HRR

•Submodels / input data:

• Chemical reaction

• Smoke production

• Radiation

• Turbulence

• Material properties for upholstery

Page 10: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

10

A1:Predicted(FDS) and measured (TCE)temperatures

Predicted and measured temperatures in living room

20

45

70

95

120

145

170

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

Time [s]

Tem

per

atu

re [

°C]

FDS E_liv 2.38

FDS E_liv 1.50

FDS E_liv 1.18

FDS E_liv 0.58

'TCE_1 '

TCE_4

'TCE_5 '

'TCE_7 '

FDS: lines

Data: markers

Page 11: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

11

Validation A2: Full chemical model

• Ignition: spark for 20 s

• Material: upholstery (NIST data)

• Reaction: polyurethane (FDS: NFPA Handbook, Babrauskas)

Submodels / input data:

• Chemical reaction

• Smoke production

• Radiation

• Turbulence

• Material properties for upholstery

Page 12: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

12

Validation A2: Full chemical model

Submodels / input data:

• Chemical reaction

• Smoke production

• Radiation

• Turbulence

• Material properties for upholstery

Page 13: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

13

A2: Predicted and measured temperatures

20

45

70

95

120

145

170

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

time [s]

tem

per

atu

re [

°C]

E_liv 2.38

'TCE_1 '

20

45

70

95

120

145

170

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

time [s]

tem

per

atu

re [

°C]

E_liv 2.10

'TCE_2 '

20

45

70

95

120

145

170

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

time [s]

tem

per

atu

re [

°C]

E_liv 1.79

'TCE_3 '

20

45

70

95

120

145

170

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

time [s]

tem

per

atu

re [

°C]

E_liv 1.50

'TCE_4 '

FDS: lines

Data: markers

Ignition time predicted too early

Page 14: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

14

Subsidised home

Living room

Page 15: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

15

Subsidised home

Living room

Smoke detectors

Page 16: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

16

Subsidised home : Furniture

Living room

Smoke detectors

Page 17: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

17

Input data: HRR sofas

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000

time in s

HR

R i

n k

W

Non-FR, SFPE Handbook

P-FR, LCA data

Page 18: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

18

Fire Spread

First burning item = sofa

Page 19: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

19

Predicted temperatures

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900

time in s

tem

pe

ratu

re in

°C

P-FR-LCA, living room 2.2 m

P-FR-LCA, living room 1.5 m

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900

time in s

tem

pe

ratu

re in

°C

sofa-SFPE, living room 2.2 m

sofa-SFPE, living room 1.5 m

120°C

600°C

130 s 730 s

FR sofaNon-FR US sofa

Page 20: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

20

Smoke: Visibility

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 50 100 150 200

time in s

visi

bilty

in m

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 50 100 150 200

time in s

visi

bili

ty in

m

30 s 60 s

4 m

Page 21: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

21

Burning TV sets: HRR

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

time [s]

He

at

rele

as

e r

ate

[k

W]

Non-flame retardant LCA (TV)Sweden small ignition source

FlameRerardant LCA (TV) US.

Page 22: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

22

Burning TV sets

Page 23: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

23

Berlin Fire Service: Fire Test

Page 24: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

24

Comparison

Observations in Fire Test Numerical model

Only TV burns 6:20 min 6:10 min

Shelf burns 8:30 min 7:00 min

Flashover 10:30 min 7:52 min

Flames out of window 11:00 min 9:00 min

Smoke detector 4:47 min 1:30 min

Page 25: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

25

Children's room

• Accumulation of high risk items

– Mattresses

– Upholstery

– Electrical devices (TV sets, computer)

– Toys (plastic)

• Wrong behaviour:

– Playing with fire

– Hiding

Page 26: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

26

Fire test in children‘s room

Extract from RTL coverage

Page 27: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

27

Model Geometry

Observations Fire test Numerical model

Only lower mattress burns

1:30 min 2:10 min

Lower and upper mattress burn

3:00 min 3:00 min

Flashover 4:00 min 3:45 min

Flames out of window

4:30 min 4:00 min

Smoke alarms

2:00 / 2:23 min

0:37 / 1:05 min

Page 28: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

28

Predicted and Measured Temperatures

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

100 150 200 250 300

Time in s

Te

mp

era

ture

in

°C

FDS 0,5

FDS 1,5

FDS 1,85

FDS 2,15

Data 0,5

Data 1,5

Data 1,85

Data 2,15

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

150 170 190 210 230 250 270 290

Time in s

Te

mp

era

ture

in °

C

FDS 0,5

FDS 1,5

FDS 1,85

FDS 2,15

Data 0,5

Data 1,5

Data 1,85

Data 2,15

Room centre Right front corner

Page 29: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

29

Predicted Temperatures in Children‘s Room - Using a FR Mattress

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

time [min]

tem

pera

ture

[°C]

non FR 2.15 m

non FR 1.50 m

FR 2.15 m

FR 1.50 m

non FR

FR

Page 30: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

30

Flame retardants have impact on fire safety

Numerical results:

• Lower temperatures in the room

• Benefit of additional escape time

• Additional time to flashover

Conclusions

Page 31: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

31

Combination of both safety technologies

Smoke detectors warn inhabitants of fire and smoke; no impact on fire development

Use of flame retardants / appropriate materials is advisable for high risk items: Reduction of flammability and heat release

Page 32: Modelling Fire Scenarios in Residential Buildings with Respect to the Benefit of Smoke Detectors and Flame Retardants Reporting of a study made by Dr.

32

Thank you for your attention !


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