Archive of IJHRB


Archive of IJHRB


Vol. - No. Vol.10 - No.4
Date Dec., 2021
Title A Review and Analysis of the Thermal Exposure in Large
Compartment Fire Experiments
Author Vinny Gupta1,2, Juan P. Hidalgo1, David Lange1, Adam Cowlard3, Cecilia Abecassis-Empis3
and José L. Torero4
Institutions 1School of Civil Engineering, The University of Queensland, Australia
2Department of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering, The University of Sydney, Australia
3Torero, Abecassis Empis and Cowlard Ltd., United Kingdom
4Department of Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering, University College London, United Kingdom
Abstract Developments in the understanding of fire behaviour for large open-plan spaces typical of tall buildings have been greatly
outpaced by the rate at which these buildings are being constructed and their characteristics changed. Numerous high-profile
fire-induced failures have highlighted the inadequacy of existing tools and standards for fire engineering when applied to
highly-optimised modern tall buildings. With the continued increase in height and complexity of tall buildings, the risk to the
occupants from fire-induced structural collapse increases, thus understanding the performance of complex structural systems
under fire exposure is imperative. Therefore, an accurate representation of the design fire for open-plan compartments is
required for the purposes of design. This will allow for knowledge-driven, quantifiable factors of safety to be used in the design
of highly optimised modern tall buildings. In this paper, we review the state-of-the-art experimental research on large open-
plan compartment fires from the past three decades. We have assimilated results collected from 37 large-scale compartment fire
experiments of the open-plan type conducted from 1993 to 2019, covering a range of compartment and fuel characteristics.
Spatial and temporal distributions of the heat fluxes imposed on compartment ceilings are estimated from the data. The
complexity of the compartment fire dynamics is highlighted by the large differences in the data collected, which currently
complicates the development of engineering tools based on physical models. Despite the large variability, this analysis shows
that the orders of magnitude of the thermal exposure are defined by the ratio of flame spread and burnout front velocities (VS / VBO),
which enables the grouping of open-plan compartment fires into three distinct modes of fire spread. Each mode is found to
exhibit a characteristic order of magnitude and temporal distribution of thermal exposure. The results show that the magnitude
of the thermal exposure for each mode are not consistent with existing performance-based design models, nevertheless, our
analysis offers a new pathway for defining thermal exposure from realistic fire scenarios in large open-plan compartments.
Keyword Compartment fires, Fire dynamics, Design fires, Travelling fires, Fire resistance
PP. PP.345~364
Paper File Files(4414 kb) View

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