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Information About The Fire Triangle

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Information about the Fire

Triangle/Tetrahedron and
Combustion
In order to understand how fire extinguishers work, you first need to know a little about
combustion. Unfortunately, it is impossible in this short introduction to completely
describe all the complex chemical and physical reactions that take place during a fire.
However this page will attempt to introduce the fundamental theories of fire and
explosion.

The Fire Tetrahedron (A pyramid)

For many years the concept of fire was symbolized by the


Triangle of Combustion and represented, fuel, heat, and oxygen. Further fire research
determined that a fourth element, a chemical chain reaction, was a necessary
component of fire. The fire triangle was changed to a fire tetrahedron to reflect this
fourth element. A tetrahedron can be described as a pyramid which is a solid having
four plane faces. Essentially all four elements must be present for fire to occur, fuel,
heat, oxygen, and a chemical chain reaction. Removal of any one of these essential
elements will result in the fire being extinguished.
The four elements are oxygen to sustain combustion, sufficient heat to raise the
material to its ignition temperature, fuel or combustible material and subsequently an
exothermic chemical chain reaction in the material. Each of the four sides of the fire
tetrahedron symbolise the Fuel, Heat, Oxygen and Chemical Chain Reaction.
Theoretically, fire extinguishers put out fire by taking away one or more elements of the
fire tetrahedron.

The symbol although simplistic, is a good


analogy, how to theoretically extinguish a fire, by creating a barrier using foam for
instance and prevent oxygen getting to the fire. By applying water you can lower the
temperature below the ignition temperature or in a flammable liquid fire by removing or
diverting the fuel. Finally interfering with the chemical chain reaction by mopping up the
free radicals in the chemical reaction using, BCF and other halon extinguishers, it also
creates an inert gas barrier. However this type of extinguisher is being phased out and
in the future other extinguishing agents may be found using this principle. The 2D figure
opposite represents a 3D model of a tetrahedron.

A Definition of Fire
One generally accepted definition of combustion or fire, is a process involving rapid
oxidation at elevated temperatures accompanied by the evolution of heated gaseous
products of combustion, and the emission of visible and invisible radiation. Oxidation
occurs all around us in the form of rust on metal surfaces, and in our bodies by
metabolising the food we eat. However, the key word that sets combustion apart from
other forms of oxidation is the word rapid.
The combustion process is usually associated with the oxidation of a fuel in the
presence of oxygen with the emission of heat and light. Oxidation, in the strict chemical
sense, means the loss of electrons. For an oxidation reaction to occur, a reducing agent
the fuel, and an oxidizing agent, usually oxygen must be present. As heat is added, the
ignition source, the fuel molecules and oxygen molecules gain energy and become
active. This molecular energy is transferred to other fuel and oxygen molecules which
creates a chain reaction. A reaction takes place where the fuel looses electrons and the
oxygen gains electrons. This exothermic electron transfer emits heat and/or light. If the
fire is in a fire grate/ or furnace we refer to this process as a controlled fire, and it is a
building on fire we refer to this process as a uncontrolled fire.

The Combustion Modes

The combustion process occurs in two modes:

The flaming

The non flaming, smoldering or glowing embers.

For the flaming mode it is necessary for solid and liquid fuels to be vaporized. The solid
fuel vapors are thermally driven off, or distilled and the liquid fuel vapors evaporated. It
is this volatile vapor from the solid or liquid fuels that we see actually burning in the
flaming mode. This gas or vapor production, emitted from the fuel is referred to as
pyrolysis. Once a flame has been established, heat transfer from the flame to the fuel
surface continues to drive off more volatile gases and perpetuates the combustion
process. For continued burning in the flaming mode requires a high burning rate, and
the heat loss associated with transfer of heat from the flame area by conduction,
convection, and radiation must be less than the energy output of the fire. If the heat loss
is greater than the energy output of the fire the fire will extinguish.
Both modes, flaming and non flaming surface modes, can occur singly, or in
combination. Flammable liquids and gases only burn in the flaming mode. Wood, straw,
and coal are examples where both modes may exist simultaneously.
Flaming combustion can occur in the following forms:
1. Premixed flames where the fuel and oxygen are mixed prior to ignition. For
example the flame on a bunsen burner, gas stove, or propane torch.
2. Diffusion flames, more common, where the fuel and oxygen are initially separate
but burn in the region where they mix, like a burning of a pool of flammable liquid
or the burning of a log.

Stages of a Fire
There are three generally recognized stages to a fire. The incipient stage, smoldering
stage, and flame stage.
The incipient stage is a region where preheating, distillation and slow pyrolysis are in
progress. Gas and sub-micron particles are generated and transported away from the
source by diffusion, air movement, and weak convection movement, produced by the
buoyancy of the products of pyrolysis.
The smoldering stage is a region of fully developed pyrolysis that begins with ignition
and includes the initial stage of combustion. Invisible aerosol and visible smoke
particles are generated and transported away from the source by moderate convection
patterns and background air movement.

The flaming stage is a region of rapid reaction that covers the period of initial
occurrence of flame to a fully developed fire. Heat transfer from the fire occurs
predominantly from radiation and convection from the flame.

Classes of fire
Combustible and flammable fuels involved in fires have been broken down into five
categories:

Class A fires - are fires involving organic solids like paper, wood, Esc

Class B fires - are fires involving flammable Liquids

Class C fires - are fires involving flammable Gasses

Class D fires - are fires involving Metals

Class F fires - are fires involving Cooking oils.

Summary
A fire begins by an external ignition source in the form of a flame, spark, or hot ember.
This external ignition source heats the fuel in the presence of oxygen. As the fuel and
oxygen are heated, molecular activity increases. If sufficiently heated, a self-sustaining
chemical chain reaction or molecular activity occurs between the fuel and oxygen. This
will continue the heating process and the resulting chain reaction will escalate without
the need for an external ignition source. Once ignition has occurred, it will continue until
1. all the available fuel or oxidant has been consumed or
2. the fuel and/or oxygen is removed or
3. by reducing the temperature by cooling, or
4. by reducing the number of excited molecules and breaking the chain reaction.

Explosions
Generally, an explosion is defined as a very rapid release of high-pressure gas into the
environment. The energy from this very rapid release of the high-pressure gas is
dissipated in the form of a shock wave.

Explosions can be classified as physical, a balloon bursting, as physical and/or


chemical, a boiler explosion, or a chemical reaction of a gas/particle mixture. Our
discussion will focus on chemical reaction explosions.
The process of a chemical reaction explosion is similar to the combustion process
whereby a fuel and oxidant have premixed prior to ignition such as petroleum vapor or
fine particles of grain dust mixed with air. However, in an explosion the oxidation
process proceeds at a greatly accelerated rate. The oxidation process is usually, but not
always, confined within an enclosure such as a tank, grain silo, so that a rapid highpressure rise occurs with an associated flame front. Generally, it is this high-pressure
shock wave that causes the damaging effects from an explosion.
Resultant shock waves that propagate from the point of ignition at a velocity less than
the speed of sound are termed deflagration. Shock wave velocities in excess of the
speed of sound are termed detonations.
A rise in pressure creating a shock wave of 6894.76 Pascals is sufficient to knock a
person down. If the rise in pressure creates a shock wave of 13789.52 Pascals to
20684.28 Pascals this sufficient to shatter an 8 to 12-inch thick concrete wall. A Pascal
(pa) is equivalent to one N/m2.

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