4.5 Article

Characterizing a Firefighter's Immediate Thermal Environment in Live-Fire Training Scenarios

Journal

FIRE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages 1667-1696

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10694-015-0555-1

Keywords

Firefighters; Heat flux; Thermal environment; Thermal class; Live-fire training; Flashover simulator

Funding

  1. NIST
  2. Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship program
  3. Fire Protection Engineering programs at UIUC

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Detailed characterization of a firefighter's typical thermal exposures during live-fire training and responses can provide important insights into the risks faced and the necessary protections, protocols, and standards required. In order to gather data on representative thermal conditions from a firefighter's continually varying local environment in a live-fire training exercise, a portable heat flux and gas temperature measurement system was created, calibrated, and integrated into firefighter personal protective equipment (PPE). Data were collected from 25 live-fire training exposures during seven different types of scenarios. Based on the collected data, mild training environments generally exposed firefighters to temperatures around 50A degrees C and heat fluxes around 1 kW/m(2), while severe training conditions generally resulted in temperatures between 150A degrees C and 200A degrees C with heat fluxes between 3 kW/m(2) and 6 kW/m(2). For every scenario investigated, the heat flux data portrayed a more severe environment than the temperature data when interpreted using established thermal classes developed by the National Institute for Standards and Technology for electronic equipment used by first responders. Local temperatures from the portable measurement system were compared with temperatures measured by stationary thermocouples installed in the training structure for 14 different exposures. It was determined the stationary temperatures represented only a rough approximate bound of the actual temperature of the immediate training environment due to the typically coarse distribution of these sensors throughout the structure and their relative (fixed) distance from the fire sets. The portable thermal measurement system has provided new insights into the integration of electronic sensors with firefighter PPE and the conditions experienced by firefighters in live-fire training scenarios, which has promise to improve the safety and health of the fire service.

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