Fighting house fires with computer models

Fighting house fires with computer models
Mechanical engineer Debbie Mackay at a controlled house fire in Braidwood, NSW. Credit: Debbie Mackay

(Phys.org) -- Through advanced computer modelling of house fires, mechanical engineers at UNSW are giving fire fighters a new suite of tools to investigate and battle dangerous blazes in time for the traditionally high-risk winter months.

Beginning with an ignition point, the models can map how fires behave as they grow, accurately predicting their overall temperature and pinpointing dangerous hotspots that responding personnel should avoid. 

“When you’re sending a fighter into a dangerous situation you want to have an idea of the temperatures they’re going to face,” says Debbie Mackay, who recently completed her PhD at UNSW, and was involved in the research project with Fire and Rescue NSW.

The models also detail how fires can respond to sudden bursts of oxygen resulting from a smashed window or an opened door, offering additional information for fire fighters planning their route of attack and evacuation.

“Venting a room can be a good thing, as it lets smoke and heat out, but if you’re letting too much oxygen in you actually feed the fire, which can lead to explosive events such as backdrafts and flashovers,” explains Mackay.  

With winter fast approaching, it’s an important consideration as fire fighters once again prepare for their riskiest season. Of the 4,000-plus residential fires in NSW last year more than 28 per cent occurred during winter. 

An expert in computational fluid dynamics, Mackay can isolate parts of her computer models to show fire fighters exactly what is happening with smoke, flames and the direction of air flow.

“There are all sorts of little things the fire fighters can learn from the models which they can’t actually see when they are facing a real fire,” she says. “When they’re inside a burning building all they see is a mass of smoke.”

The models have also piqued the interest of Fire and Rescue NSW’s investigation unit, which sees an opportunity to use them to trace a fire backward in time to its origin.

“Such fire scene mapping linked with these models would represent a real step forward in forensic fire scene examination,” says Chief Superintendent Greg Buckley with Fire and Rescue NSW.

Mackay and her colleagues in the School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering at UNSW began with a controlled fire inside a small one-metre cubed enclosure, where they could carefully monitor all the variables, including wind conditions and the impact of certain building materials.

They then graduated to a shipping container, and eventually reached the pinnacle of burning down a house in Braidwood, NSW that was due for demolition.

Heat resistant sensors were positioned in the house and recorded information about temperature and airflow. This data, along with information about the type of fire, its ignition and the present materials, are all fed into the computer models. 

Future research will explore the behaviour of fires in different scenarios and larger structures, such as apartment blocks.

Citation: Fighting house fires with computer models (2012, May 24) retrieved 20 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2012-05-house.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Discovery questions current bushfire mitigation approach

1 shares

Feedback to editors