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Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air. / Korobeinichev, O. P.; Kumaran, S. Muthu; Raghavan, V. et al.

In: Combustion Science and Technology, Vol. 195, No. 13, 2023, p. 3072-3094.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Korobeinichev, OP, Kumaran, SM, Raghavan, V, Trubachev, SA, Paletsky, AA, Shmakov, AG, Glaznev, RK, Chernov, AA, Tereshchenko, AG, Loboda, EL & Kasymov, DP 2023, 'Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air', Combustion Science and Technology, vol. 195, no. 13, pp. 3072-3094. https://doi.org/10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236

APA

Korobeinichev, O. P., Kumaran, S. M., Raghavan, V., Trubachev, S. A., Paletsky, A. A., Shmakov, A. G., Glaznev, R. K., Chernov, A. A., Tereshchenko, A. G., Loboda, E. L., & Kasymov, D. P. (2023). Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air. Combustion Science and Technology, 195(13), 3072-3094. https://doi.org/10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236

Vancouver

Korobeinichev OP, Kumaran SM, Raghavan V, Trubachev SA, Paletsky AA, Shmakov AG et al. Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air. Combustion Science and Technology. 2023;195(13):3072-3094. doi: 10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236

Author

Korobeinichev, O. P. ; Kumaran, S. Muthu ; Raghavan, V. et al. / Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air. In: Combustion Science and Technology. 2023 ; Vol. 195, No. 13. pp. 3072-3094.

BibTeX

@article{a238438e8009435b9fa70b4b4c5ee801,
title = "Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air",
abstract = "Systematic experiments and complementing numerical simulations have been reported for the first time to understand the spread of a ground fire over pine needle bed of the Siberian boreal forests (Pinus silvestris) in still air. Using equipment and instrumentations specifically developed for the purpose, careful experiments have been conducted to reveal the effects of the bed width, fuel moisture content, fuel load, and the packing ratio on flame spread rate, temperature distributions in both gas and condensed phases. Temperatures are measured using fine thermocouples fixed at various locations from the bed surface. The surface temperature of the bed during flame propagation has been measured using a micro-thermocouple inserted in a single pine needle in the bed as well as using an infrared (IR) camera. Further, for the first time, the total and radiant heat fluxes from the flame to the bed surface have been measured using compact cooled sensors placed inside the needle bed, over which the flame propagates. In order to understand more about the flow field and flame spread process, a 3D numerical model based on the Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) has been used to simulate few of the experiments. The processes governing pine needle pyrolysis, char oxidation, gas phase combustion and radiation have been modeled using simplified approaches reported in literature. The model is capable of predicting experimentally measured flame propagation velocities for most of the cases quite well.",
keywords = "bed width, fire spread, fuel load, heat flux, moisture content, Pine needles",
author = "Korobeinichev, {O. P.} and Kumaran, {S. Muthu} and V. Raghavan and Trubachev, {S. A.} and Paletsky, {A. A.} and Shmakov, {A. G.} and Glaznev, {R. K.} and Chernov, {A. A.} and Tereshchenko, {A. G.} and Loboda, {E. L.} and Kasymov, {D. P.}",
note = "This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research [Project No. 19-58-80002]. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236",
language = "English",
volume = "195",
pages = "3072--3094",
journal = "Combustion Science and Technology",
issn = "0010-2202",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "13",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigation of the Impact of Pinus Silvestris Pine Needles Bed Parameters on the Spread of Ground Fire in Still Air

AU - Korobeinichev, O. P.

AU - Kumaran, S. Muthu

AU - Raghavan, V.

AU - Trubachev, S. A.

AU - Paletsky, A. A.

AU - Shmakov, A. G.

AU - Glaznev, R. K.

AU - Chernov, A. A.

AU - Tereshchenko, A. G.

AU - Loboda, E. L.

AU - Kasymov, D. P.

N1 - This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research [Project No. 19-58-80002]. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Systematic experiments and complementing numerical simulations have been reported for the first time to understand the spread of a ground fire over pine needle bed of the Siberian boreal forests (Pinus silvestris) in still air. Using equipment and instrumentations specifically developed for the purpose, careful experiments have been conducted to reveal the effects of the bed width, fuel moisture content, fuel load, and the packing ratio on flame spread rate, temperature distributions in both gas and condensed phases. Temperatures are measured using fine thermocouples fixed at various locations from the bed surface. The surface temperature of the bed during flame propagation has been measured using a micro-thermocouple inserted in a single pine needle in the bed as well as using an infrared (IR) camera. Further, for the first time, the total and radiant heat fluxes from the flame to the bed surface have been measured using compact cooled sensors placed inside the needle bed, over which the flame propagates. In order to understand more about the flow field and flame spread process, a 3D numerical model based on the Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) has been used to simulate few of the experiments. The processes governing pine needle pyrolysis, char oxidation, gas phase combustion and radiation have been modeled using simplified approaches reported in literature. The model is capable of predicting experimentally measured flame propagation velocities for most of the cases quite well.

AB - Systematic experiments and complementing numerical simulations have been reported for the first time to understand the spread of a ground fire over pine needle bed of the Siberian boreal forests (Pinus silvestris) in still air. Using equipment and instrumentations specifically developed for the purpose, careful experiments have been conducted to reveal the effects of the bed width, fuel moisture content, fuel load, and the packing ratio on flame spread rate, temperature distributions in both gas and condensed phases. Temperatures are measured using fine thermocouples fixed at various locations from the bed surface. The surface temperature of the bed during flame propagation has been measured using a micro-thermocouple inserted in a single pine needle in the bed as well as using an infrared (IR) camera. Further, for the first time, the total and radiant heat fluxes from the flame to the bed surface have been measured using compact cooled sensors placed inside the needle bed, over which the flame propagates. In order to understand more about the flow field and flame spread process, a 3D numerical model based on the Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) has been used to simulate few of the experiments. The processes governing pine needle pyrolysis, char oxidation, gas phase combustion and radiation have been modeled using simplified approaches reported in literature. The model is capable of predicting experimentally measured flame propagation velocities for most of the cases quite well.

KW - bed width

KW - fire spread

KW - fuel load

KW - heat flux

KW - moisture content

KW - Pine needles

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85122083127&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/76a9aba0-ece9-31d7-895b-e65449e81256/

U2 - 10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236

DO - 10.1080/00102202.2021.2019236

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85122083127

VL - 195

SP - 3072

EP - 3094

JO - Combustion Science and Technology

JF - Combustion Science and Technology

SN - 0010-2202

IS - 13

ER -

ID: 35243674