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Smoke Component Yields from Bench-scale Fire Tests - 3. ISO 5660-1 / ASTM E 1354 with Enclosure and Variable Oxygen Concentration (Paperback)
Loot Price: R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
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Smoke Component Yields from Bench-scale Fire Tests - 3. ISO 5660-1 / ASTM E 1354 with Enclosure and Variable Oxygen Concentration (Paperback)
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Loot Price R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A standard procedure is needed for obtaining smoke toxic potency
data for use in fire hazard and risk analyses. Room fire testing of
finished products is impractical, directing attention to the use of
apparatus that can obtain the needed data quickly and at affordable
cost. This report presents examination of the fourth of a series
bench-scale fire tests to produce data on the yields of toxic
products in both pre-flashover and post-flashover flaming fires.
The apparatus is the ISO 5660-1 / ASTM E 1354 cone calorimeter,
modified to have an enclosure and a gas delivery system allowing
variable oxygen concentration. The test specimens was cut from
finished products that were also burned in room-scale tests: a sofa
made of upholstered cushions on a steel frame, particleboard
bookcases with a laminated finish, and household electric cable.
Initially, the standard test procedure was followed. Subsequent
variation in the procedure included reducing the supplied oxygen
volume fraction to 0.18, 0.16, and 0.14, reducing the incident heat
flux to 25 kW/m2, and reducing the gas flow rate by half. The
yields of CO2 CO, HCl, and HCN were determined. The yields of other
toxicants (NO, NO2, formaldehyde, and acrolein) were below the
detection limits, but volume fractions at the detection limits were
shown to be of limited toxicological importance relative to the
detected toxicants. In general, performing the tests at the reduced
oxygen volume fraction led to small increases on the toxic gas
yields. The exceptions were an increase in the CO yield for the
bookcase at 0.14 oxygen volume fraction. Reducing the incident heat
flux had little effect on the toxic gas yields, other than
increasing variability. Reducing the gas flow rate reduced the
limits of detection by half, but also resulted in reduced gas
yields at lower oxygen volume fractions. In none of the procedure
variations did the CO yield approach the value of 0.2 found in
real-scale post flashover fire tests.
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