Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Fire Behaviour in Polyurethane Foams
Date
2019-11-25
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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ORCID
Type
Thesis
Degree Level
Masters
Abstract
Due to the complex and varying nature of a flame and its products, the scaling of fire
behaviour has been a challenge in the area of fire science. The use of small-scale test data to
interpret full-scale fire behaviour is an area of ongoing research with potential savings for
manufacturers required by code to test products for large-scale fire behaviour. Polyurethane
foam was selected as the sample material for the research due to its widespread application in
home and office furniture and its potential to act as a fuel source in fires due to a high
hydrocarbon content. The heart of the problem lies with predicting how much heat is released by
the fire and the rate at which flame spreads across the material. This research builds on previous
University of Saskatchewan research and seeks to provide a method to predict full-scale flame
spread across a material. Additionally, methodologies such as the Combustion Behavior of
Upholstered Furniture (CBUF) Model applied for full-scale heat release rate (HRR) predictions
and Alpert’s correlation employed in predicting compartment temperatures are also evaluated.
Small-scale cone calorimeter tests which serve as input to the CBUF model were
conducted for foam thickness of 2.5, 7.5 and 10 cm at incident heat fluxes of 5, 10, 15, 20, 35
and 50 kW/m2. Separate small-scale tests were conducted on foams instrumented with
thermocouples to measure temperatures on the surface and at depth. A numerical model was
proposed to predict the surface temperatures and estimate the time to ignition of the small-scale
foam specimens. Full-scale compartment fire tests were conducted for centre and edge ignition at
the University of Waterloo Live Fire Facility. Compartment temperatures and flame areas were
measured. A model was developed to predict flame spread based on the data collected from
previous University of Saskatchewan furniture calorimeter test.
The results of the flame spread model showed promise in predicting the area spread rates.
The model, however, did not capture some of the edge effects that occurred due to the flame
reaching the foam boundaries. The area spread model was used within the CBUF model which
satisfactorily predicted the full-scale HRR. The HRR predictions were then applied to a modified
version of Alpert’s correlation which predicted ceiling jet temperatures accounting for the spread
of flame. Predictions of ceiling jet temperatures made using Alpert’s correlation was improved
by considering flame spread.
Description
Keywords
Polyurethane, Foams, Mattress, Fire
Citation
Degree
Master of Science (M.Sc.)
Department
Mechanical Engineering
Program
Mechanical Engineering