Prediction of carbon monoxide in fires by conditional moment closure


Autoria(s): Cleary, M. J.; Kent, J. H.; Bilger, R. W.
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Carbon monoxide is the chief killer in fires. Dangerous levels of CO can occur when reacting combustion gases are quenched by heat transfer, or by mixing of the fire plume in a cooled under- or overventilated upper layer. In this paper, carbon monoxide predictions for enclosure fires are modeled by the conditional moment closure (CMC) method and are compared with laboratory data. The modeled fire situation is a buoyant, turbulent, diffusion flame burning under a hood. The fire plume entrains fresh air, and the postflame gases are cooled considerably under the hood by conduction and radiation, emulating conditions which occur in enclosure fires and lead to the freezing of CO burnout. Predictions of CO in the cooled layer are presented in the context of a complete computational fluid dynamics solution of velocity, temperature, and major species concentrations. A range of underhood equivalence ratios, from rich to lean, are investigated. The CMC method predicts CO in very good agreement with data. In particular, CMC is able to correctly predict CO concentrations in lean cooled gases, showing its capability in conditions where reaction rates change considerably.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:39196

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Combustion Institute

Palavras-Chave #Thermodynamics #Energy & Fuels #Engineering, Chemical #Engineering, Mechanical #Turbulent Combustion #Diffusion Flames #091508 Turbulent Flows #091501 Computational Fluid Dynamics #090405 Non-automotive Combustion and Fuel Engineering (incl. Alternative/Renewable Fuels)
Tipo

Conference Paper