This work presents an evaluation of the effectiveness of active ventilation methods compared to passive ventilation methods in a typical B + GF + 9 building, focusing on the impact of burner height location on smoke control performance. The numerical model was validated using a full-scale room fire experiment involving a 4350 kJ/s wood crib load, where the HRR was calibrated via the mass loss method, achieving an RMSE of 210 kW and MRE of 5.04%. FDS simulations were conducted across six scenarios involving burners on the ground, fifth, and ninth floors. The findings demonstrate that, while natural ventilation allows the stairwell to reach lethal conditions with temperatures exceeding 180 °C and CO concentrations above 0.24%, the implementation of top-level mechanical pressurization maintains temperatures below the 60 °C tenability threshold. The mechanical ventilation system extended the Available Safe Egress Time (ASET) by 75% to 110%, with effectiveness increasing as the burner elevation approached the fan location. Overall, the study provides a validated approach for transforming stairwells into protected refuge zones in existing mid-rise buildings. Overall, merging empirical with computational methods is a proven basis for simulating scaled-up, complicated layouts. This guarantees accurate initial conditions when analyzing urban fire emergencies.
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Ene et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69db375f4fe01fead37c54d7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/fire9040157
Iulian-Cristian Ene
Vlad IORDACHE
Dan-Adrian Ionescu
Fire
Technical University of Cluj-Napoca
Technical University of Civil Engineering of Bucharest
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