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1.
Ecol Appl ; 32(7): e2682, 2022 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35592904

RESUMO

Over the past several decades, the management of historically frequent-fire forests in the western United States has received significant attention due to the linked ecological and social risks posed by the increased occurrence of large, contiguous patches of high-severity fire. As a result, efforts are underway to simultaneously reduce potential fire and fuel hazards and restore characteristics indicative of historical forest structures and ecological processes that enhance the diversity and quality of wildlife habitat across landscapes. Despite widespread agreement on the need for action, there is a perceived tension among scientists concerning silvicultural treatments that modify stands to optimally reduce potential fire behavior (fuel hazard reduction) versus those that aim to emulate historical forest structures and create structurally complex stands (restoration). In this work, we evaluated thinning treatments in the Black Hills National Forest that exemplify the extremes of a treatment continuum that ranges from fuel hazard reduction to restoration. The goal of this work was to understand how the differing three-dimensional stand structures created by these treatment approaches altered potential fire behavior. Our results indicate that restoration treatments created higher levels of vertical and horizontal structural complexity than the fuel hazard reduction treatments but resulted in similar reductions to potential crown fire behavior. There were some trade-offs identified as the restoration treatments created larger openings, which generated faster mean rates of fire spread; however, these increased spread rates did not translate to higher levels of canopy consumption. Overall, our results suggest that treatments can create vertical and horizontal complexity desired for restoration and wildlife habitat management while reducing fire hazard and that they can be used in concert with traditional fuel hazard reduction treatments to reduce landscape scale fire risk. We also provide some suggestions to land managers seeking to design and implement prescriptions that emulate historical structures and enhance forest complexity.


Assuntos
Incêndios , Traqueófitas , Ecossistema , Florestas
2.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(7)2020 Apr 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32268537

RESUMO

Flame retardant cables were investigated using thermo-gravimetric analysis to measure the reference temperature and reference rate required for a fire spread simulation using a Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS). Sensitivity analysis was also performed to understand the effects of the reference temperature and rate on the pyrolysis reactions. A two-step pyrolysis reaction was typically observed regardless of the cable type, and each pyrolysis reaction could be attributed to single or multiple components depending on the cable type and reaction order. Although the structures, compositions, and insulation performances of the cables differed considerably, the reference temperatures of the two-step pyrolysis reaction were extremely similar regardless of the cable type. Conversely, the reference rates of the different types of cables varied significantly. The sensitivity analysis results indicate that the mean values of the reference temperature and rate are sufficient to simulate the pyrolysis reactions of flame retardant cables. The results obtained herein also suggest that the heat transfer and pyrolysis reaction path associated with the multi-layered cable structure may be more important for accurately determining the ignition and fire spread characteristics, which are attributable to differences in cable structure, composition, and insulation performance.

3.
Fire Saf J ; 90: 72-85, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28785126

RESUMO

This work seeks to support the validation of large eddy simulation models used to simulate fire suppression. The emphasis in the present study is on the prediction of flame extinction and the prevention of spurious reignition using a fast chemistry, mixing-controlled combustion model applicable to realistic fire scenarios of engineering interest. The configuration provides a buoyant, turbulent methane diffusion flame within a controlled co-flowing oxidizer. The oxidizer allows for the supply of a mixture of air and nitrogen, including conditions for which oxygen-dilution in the oxidizer leads to flame extinction. Measurements to support model validation include local profiles of thermocouple temperature and oxygen mole fraction, global combustion efficiency, and the limiting oxygen index. The present study evaluates the performance of critical-flame-temperature-based extinction and reignition models using the Fire Dynamics Simulator, an open-source fire dynamics solver. Alternate model cases are explored, each offering a unique treatment of extinction and reignition. Comparisons between simulated results and experimental measurements are used to evaluate the capability of these models to accurately describe flame extinction. Of the considered cases, those that include provisions to prevent spurious reignition show excellent agreement with measured data, whereas a baseline case lacking explicit reignition treatment fails to predict extinction.

4.
Springerplus ; 5(1): 1744, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27795887

RESUMO

The natural smoke exhaust system for tall spaces is more advantageous than the mechanical type of exhaust. In Taiwan, the effectiveness of natural smoke exhaust systems is inspected only by checking the vent area size. However, the air flow field in a tall space is very complicated, both at ordinary times or during fires. This study used Schlieren Photography technique, on the principle that light rays are refracted when penetrating materials of different densities, to test and simulate the dynamic measurement of hot air in tall space model. A single-mirror Schlieren system, including an 838 mm (H) × 736 mm (W) square concave mirror, as well as the focal length of 3100 mm was adopted. The experimental process of six smokeless candles were used for 1/12.5 model experiment to record the dynamic distribution and accumulation of air flow in the abovementioned space. FDS software was used to simulate various fire scenarios. The different locations of openings in some cases were studied with the maximum temperature scales of 40 and 45 °C, separately. The simulation results and experimental images showed highly similar hot air flow patterns. Schlieren Photography was proved capable of recording and visualizing the dynamic flow of hot air immediately, directly and accurately.

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