Aerial forest firefighting is a critical technology for wildfire suppression. Recent studies have examined suppression agent drop dynamics, deposition patterns, and optimization strategies. This review synthesizes advances from three perspectives: (i) in-flight suppression agent jet dynamics, (ii) ground deposition patterns, and (iii) suppression effectiveness, while outlining future research directions. Flight altitude, velocity, and momentum ratio govern jet behavior—affecting penetration, expansion, and breakup. Momentum ratio, shaped by drop velocity and aircraft speed, is pivotal in penetration depth and fragmentation. Deposition patterns vary with delivery systems and flight parameters: low-altitude/low-speed drops yield higher coverage density over smaller areas, whereas high-altitude/high-speed drops cover larger areas but less densely. Suppression efficacy depends on fire intensity–vegetation interactions, droplet size–coverage requirements, and operational parameters such as response time, aircraft capacity, and real-time intelligence. Large droplets excel in cooling high-intensity flames, while fine droplets provide efficient area coverage. Adequate resources and integrated data enhance outcomes. Future work should couple multi-physics models of terrain, meteorology, and fire plume dynamics, and develop integrated deposition models including wind, thermodynamics, terrain, and fire behavior to optimize aerial dispersion in diverse wildfire scenarios.
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Ji Wu
Qiuze An
Jiang Huang
Fire
Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (China)
Civil Aviation Flight University of China
Craft Group (China)
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Wu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c1de4eeef8a2a6b10ac — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/fire9040166