4.7 Article

Fire Behavior of Thermally Thin Materials in Cone Calorimeter

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13081297

Keywords

flammability; cone calorimeter; thermally thin materials; textiles

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The study found that the flammability of thermally thin materials is primarily determined by sample weight, with the peak of heat release rate and burning rate being influenced by fire load. A simple model was proposed to calculate pHRR based on heat flux, sample weight, and effective heat of combustion. This model can predict easily the peak of heat release rate and guide flame retardant strategies.
In this study, a representative set of thermally thin materials including various lignocellulosic and synthetic fabrics, dense wood, and polypropylene sheets were tested using a cone calorimeter at different heat fluxes. Time-to-ignition, critical heat flux, and peak of heat release rate (pHRR) were the main parameters considered. It appears that the flammability is firstly monitored by the sample weight. Especially, while the burning rate of thermally-thin materials does never reach a steady state in cone calorimeter, their pHRR appears to be mainly driven by the fire load (i.e., the product of sample weight and effective heat of combustion) with no or negligible influence of textile structure. A simple phenomenological model was proposed to calculate the pHRR taking into account only three parameters, namely heat flux, sample weight, and effective heat of combustion. The model allows predicting easily the peak of heat release rate, which is often considered as the main single property informing about the fire hazard. It also allows drawing some conclusions about the flame retardant strategies to reduce the pHRR..

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