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Author(s):
Weidong Yan, Naian Liu, Hong Zhu, Haixiang Chen, Xiaodong Xie, Wei Gao, Zhihao Du
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire Behavior
Simulation Modeling
Fire Effects
Wildland Urban Interface

NRFSN number: 26467
FRAMES RCS number: 69221
Record updated:

Background: Spot fires play a significant role in the rapid spread of wildland and wildland–urban interface fires.

Aims: This paper presents an experimental and modelling study on the flaming and smouldering burning of wood firebrands under forced convection.

Methods: The firebrand burning experiments were conducted with different wind speeds and firebrand sizes.

Key results: The burning rate of firebrands under forced convection is quantified by wood pyrolysis rate, char oxidation rate and a convective term. The firebrand projected area is correlated with firebrand diameter, char density, wind speed, and flaming or smouldering burning. A surface temperature model is derived in terms of condensed-phase energy conservation. We finally establish a simplified firebrand transport model based on the burning rate, projected area and surface temperature of firebrands.

Conclusion: The mass loss due to wood pyrolysis is much greater than that due to char oxidation in self-sustaining burning. The burning rate is proportional to U1/2, where U is wind speed. The projected area for flaming firebrands decreases more rapidly than that for smouldering ones. The firebrand surface temperature is mainly determined by radiation.

Implications: Knowledge about firebrand burning characteristics is essential for predicting the flight distance and trajectory in firebrand transport.

Citation

Yan, Weidong; Liu, Naian; Zhu, Hong; Chen, Haixiang; Xie, Xiaodong; Gao, Wei; Du, Zhihao. 2024. Firebrand burning under wind: an experimental study. International Journal of Wildland Fire 33:WF23151. https://doi.org/10.1071/WF23151

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