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The Concept and Measurement of Extinguishability as a Flammability Criterion
26
Citations
1
References
1973
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringFlammability CriterionOxygen ConcentrationUpward BurningEngineeringFire SafetyCombustion ScienceCombustion TheorySteady BurningFire ResistanceThermodynamicsHeat TransferChemical KineticsLaminar Flame
Burning experiments in enclosed spaces have shown that oxygen depletion leading to flame extinction occurs even in a relatively large volume of air, because convection is only partially effective in supplying air to a burning flame and removing products of combustion and pyrolysis. Quantitative evaluation of extinguishability through oxygen depletion determined under realistic burning conditions would, therefore, be a valuable indication of the hazard potential of a material. Accordingly, a method has been developed for establishing a characteristiol minimum-burning condition in terms of oxygen concentration which results in a more stringent criterion for the innate flammability of a material than the conventional oxygen index (O.I.) value. The TRI Flammability Analyzer is used to measure steady-state flame propagation rates at several oxygen concentrations high enough to support steady burning. Extrapolating the resultant linear burning rate oxygen concentration relation to zero burning rate-yields an intrinsie (O.I.) 0 . With the analyzer. it is possible to determine intrinsic indices for the more common and vigorous upward directions of burning, and the upward indices obtained for a group of natural and synthetic fabrics, woven and knitted, are apprediably lower than the indices for the downward direcion. Indeed, all fabrics studied. except Nomex®. are found to be inherently capable of upward burning in air.
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