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Development of the cone calorimeter—A bench‐scale heat release rate apparatus based on oxygen consumption

544

Citations

3

References

1984

Year

TLDR

The authors developed a bench‑scale cone calorimeter based on oxygen consumption to measure heat release rates for fire testing and research. The device tests uniform or composite specimens in horizontal or vertical orientations, applies up to 100 kW m⁻² radiant heat, and determines heat release by measuring combustion gas flow, oxygen depletion, and simultaneous mass loss. It achieves higher accuracy than existing instruments while remaining simple to operate and cost‑effective.

Abstract

Abstract A new bench‐scale rate of heat release calorimeter utilizing the oxygen consumption principle has been developed for use in fire testing and research. Specimens may be of uniform or composite construction and may be tested in a horizontal, face‐up orientation, or, for those which do not melt, in a vertical orientation. An external irradiance of zero to over 100 kW m −2 may be imposed by means of a temperature‐controlled radiant heater. The rate of heat release is determined by measuring combustion product gas flow and oxygen depletion, while the mass loss is also recorded simultaneously. The instrument has been designed to be capable of higher accuracy than existing instruments and yet to be simple to operate and moderate in construction cost. The instrument is thermed a ‘cone calorimeter’ because of the geometric arrangement of the electric heater.