Fire Safety Science Digital Archive

IAFSS Symposiums

IAFSS Symposiums All Symposiums Symposium 1 Symposium 2 Symposium 3 Symposium 4 Symposium 5 Symposium 6 Symposium 7 Symposium 8 Symposium 9 Symposium 10 Symposium 11 Fire Research Notes AOFST Symposiums
The Of Role Of Smoke-point In Material Flammability Testing

De Ris, J.L. and Cheng, X.F., 1994. The Of Role Of Smoke-point In Material Flammability Testing. Fire Safety Science 4: 301-312. doi:10.3801/IAFSS.FSS.4-301


ABSTRACT

It has been established that the release of both thermal radiation and products of incomplete combustion from well-ventilated buoyant turbulent diffusion-flames are well-correlated by the fuel's laminar flame smoke-point value. Thus the smoke-point of a material provides an important measure of its flammability. Standard methods are available for measuring the smoke-points of gaseous and liquid fuels, but not for solid fuels. The apparatus developed for the present study can be used for measuring the smoke-points of charring and noncharring solid fuels. A horizontal fuel sample is continuously fed into a downward pointing CO, laser beam which pyrolyzes a small area of the sample. The heat release rate (or flame height) of the steady laminar flame produced by the pyrolysis gases is controlled by the laser beam power and/or the sample feed rate. The flame height is measured by a video camera while the release of smoke is measured by its attenuation of an electronically chopped infrared beam. The smoke-point is defined here by the critical flame height (or heat release rate) at which significant smoke is released from the flame tip. This smoke-point criterion occurs at considerably greater flame heights than the "equal-wings" condition, which previously has been used by some investigators to define the smoke-point.


Keyword(s):

flammability testing, flame radiation, incomplete combustion, smoke- point, soot


View Article

Member's Page | Join IAFSS | Author's Site

Copyright © International Association for Fire Safety Science