Computer modelling of the corner compartment fire test on the large-scale Cardington test frame

1998 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Bailey
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Proe

Purpose This paper aims to facilitate verification of computer modelling techniques for complex structures exposed to fire and to test the effect of some steel beams being left unprotected. Design/methodology/approach This paper describes a fire test conducted on a large-scale structure representing four corner bays of a typical multi-storey steel-frame office building. Findings A new and unexpected mode of damage occurred. Originality/value The test results indicate that an alternate reinforcement detail should be used in combination with unprotected beams.


2021 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 103844
Author(s):  
Jintao Duan ◽  
Yuli Dong ◽  
Jianzhuang Xiao ◽  
Dashan Zhang ◽  
Wei Zheng ◽  
...  

1949 ◽  
Vol 53 (466) ◽  
pp. 997-1008
Author(s):  
F. W. Page ◽  
J. C. King

The Design of test frames of all types owes a great deal to the pioneer work of the Structures Department, Royal Aircraft Establishment. This particular frame contains some novel features and has been subjected to some unusual overall calibration tests, particularly in relation to the entirely automatic and centralised control gear.The choice of apparatus for testing large scale structural components may be influenced by many factors. In the present case, the choice of a test frame rather than other types of equipment was governed by the following considerations.In an industrial establishment it is essential that test equipment should be put to maximum use. Unlike a central testing establishment such as the R.A.E., major strength tests are relatively infrequent and therefore the equipment should also be suitable for as much as possible of the development and research testing which cannot be undertaken on standard material testing machines.


Author(s):  
Marina Erenberg ◽  
Claus Bletzer ◽  
Martin Feldkamp ◽  
André Musolff ◽  
Marko Nehrig ◽  
...  

Accident safe packages for the transport of spent nuclear fuel and high-level waste shall fulfil international IAEA safety requirements. Compliance is shown by consecutive mechanical and thermal testing. Additional numerical analysis are usually part of the safety evaluation. For damage protection some package designs are equipped with wood filled impact limiters encapsulated by steel sheets. The safety of these packages is established in compliance with IAEA regulations. Cumulative mechanical and fire tests are conducted to achieve safety standards and to prevent loss of containment. Mechanical reliability is proven by drop tests. Drop testing might cause significant damage of the impact limiter steel sheets and might enable sufficient oxygen supply to the impact limiter during the fire test to ignite the wood filling. The boundary conditions of the fire test are precisely described in the IAEA regulatory. During the test the impact limiter will be subjected to a 30 minute enduring fire phase. Subsequent to the fire phase any burning of the specimen has to extinguish naturally and no artificial cooling is allowed. At BAM a large-scale fire test with a real size impact limiter and a wood volume of about 3m3 was conducted to investigate the burning behaviour of wood filled impact limiters in steel sheet encapsulation. The impact limiter was equipped with extensive temperature monitoring equipment. Until today burning of such impact limiters is not sufficiently considered in transport package design and more investigation is necessary to explore the consequences of the impacting fire. The objective of the large scale test was to find out whether a self-sustaining smouldering or even a flaming fire inside the impact limiter was initiated and what impact on the cask is resulting. The amount of energy, transferred from the impact limiter into the cask is of particular importance for the safety of heavy weight packages. With the intention of heat flux quantification a new approach was made and a test bench was designed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.-J. Herbert ◽  
W. Sander

ABSTRACTThe paper gives a quantitative description of the chemical reactions, the dissolution and precipitation processes which take place when water or brines come into contact with the main mineral assemblages of the German Zechstein salt formation, rock salt with Ca-sulfates, and the potash beds hartsalz and carnallitite. The results of two large scale in situ dissolution tests are presented. These results have been successfully reproduced by computer modelling using the geochemical code EQ3/6.


Author(s):  
Emil Braun ◽  
Barbara C Levin ◽  
Maya Paabo ◽  
Joshua L Gurman ◽  
Helena M Clark ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Koji Shirai ◽  
Koji Tasaka ◽  
Toshiko Udagawa

Abstract To clarify the heat and smoke propagation in multi-compartments under the spread of cable fire, a large-scale multi-compartment fire test (hereinafter the CFS-2 test) was performed by the Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN) in France within the framework promoted by the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) in Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) program PRISME2 (OECD/NEA, 2017). In the CFS-2 test, two rooms of a large-scale facility were adopted and these rooms have an identical volume (120 m3) enclosed with fire walls and were connected by a doorway (0.8 m in width and 2.17 m in height). As a fire source, five-layer cable trays (tray length of 2.4m, tray width of 0.45m and separation distance between trays of 0.3 m) with a fire-retardant PVC cable (77 kg) were used and ignited by a propane gas burner. The power level of the propane gas burner was set to around 80 kW. Moreover, all rooms were mechanically ventilated, and the renewal rate was 15 times per hour (3600 m3/h). During the fire test, the mass loss rate of fuel, gas and soot mass concentration, gas temperature, and etc. were measured. The measured peak values of the HRR, the mass loss rate and gas temperature were about 800 kW, 58 g/s and greater than 600 °C, respectively (Zavaleta, 2017). As a fire model predicting fire characteristics in a compartment, a two-zone model, which divides the fire room into the hot smoke upper layer and lower layer consisting of cool fresh air, is widely used due to the advantages of the brevity of the calculation routine and the reliability of the calculation results. Among them, the BRI2 series, developed in Japan, is now reaching the current BRI2002 software (Wakamatsu, 2004) after several upgrades to improve the calculation precision. The Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry (CRIEPI) introduced the cable tray fire source model based on the FLASH-CAT (Flame Spread over Horizontal Cable Trays) developed by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) (McGrattan, 2012) into the zone code BRI2002. By comparing the numerical results with the experimental values measured during the CFS-2 test, the methodology for ignition time delay of each tray and horizontal flame propagation speed for each tray were discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document