Variation in wind and crown fire behaviour in a northern jack pine – black spruce forest

2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1561-1576 ◽  
Author(s):  
S W Taylor ◽  
B M Wotton ◽  
M E Alexander ◽  
G N Dalrymple

Fire spread and flame temperature were examined in a series of nine experimental crown fires conducted in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Average rates of spread were 17.8–66.8 m·min–1 (0.3–1.1 m·s–1) over burning periods from about 1.5–10 min across 75 m × 75 m to 150 m × 150 m plots. Detailed maps of fire front progression revealed areas with higher rates of spread in the order of tens of metres in horizontal dimension and tens of seconds in duration in several of the fires, which is consistent with the influence of coherent wind gusts. Comparison of open and in-stand wind speed before and after burning suggests that defoliation in the canopy layer during burning would result in the flaming zone having greater exposure to the ambient wind. Estimates of flame front residence from video observations at the surface averaged 34 s; estimates from temperature measurements decreased significantly with height from 74 s at the surface to 31 s below the canopy.

2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel G. Cruz ◽  
Martin E. Alexander

Crown fires are complex, unstable phenomena dependent on feedback mechanisms between the combustion products of distinct fuel layers. We describe non-linear fire behaviour associated with crowning and the uncertainty they cause in fire behaviour predictions by running a semiphysical modelling system within a simple Monte Carlo simulation framework. The method was able to capture the dynamics of passive and active crown fire spread regimes, providing estimates of average rate of spread and the extent of crown fire activity. System outputs were evaluated against data collected from a wildfire that occurred in a radiata pine plantation in south-eastern Australia. The Monte Carlo method reduced prediction errors relative to the more commonly used deterministic modelling approach, and allowed a more complete description of the level of crown fire behaviour to expect. The method also provides uncertainty measures and probabilistic outputs, extending the range of questions that can be answered by fire behaviour models.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1548-1560 ◽  
Author(s):  
B J Stocks ◽  
M E Alexander ◽  
B M Wotton ◽  
C N Stefner ◽  
M D Flannigan ◽  
...  

This paper reports on the behaviour of 10 experimental crown fires conducted between 1997 and 2000 during the International Crown Fire Modelling Experiment (ICFME) in Canada's Northwest Territories. The primary goal of ICFME was a replicated series of high-intensity crown fires designed to validate and improve existing theoretical and empirical models of crown fire behaviour. Fire behaviour characteristics were typical for fully developed boreal forest crown fires, with fires advancing at 15–70 m/min, consuming significant quantities of fuel (2.8–5.5 kg/m2) and releasing vast amounts of thermal heat energy. The resulting flame fronts commonly extended 25–40 m above the ground with head fire intensities up to 90 000 kW/m. Depth of burn ranged from 1.4–3.6 cm, representing a 25%–65% reduction in the thickness of the forest floor layer. Most of the smaller diameter (<3.0 cm) woody surface fuels were consumed, along with a significant proportion of the larger downed woody material. A high degree of fuel consumption occurred in the understory and overstory canopy with very little material less than 1.0 cm in diameter remaining. The documentation of fire behaviour, fire danger, and fire weather conditions carried out during ICFME permitted the evaluation of several empirically based North American fire behaviour prediction systems and models.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1588-1599 ◽  
Author(s):  
B W Butler ◽  
M A Finney ◽  
P L Andrews ◽  
F A Albini

A numerical model for the prediction of the spread rate and intensity of forest crown fires has been developed. The model is the culmination of over 20 years of previously reported fire modeling research and experiments; however, it is only recently that it has been formulated in a closed form that permits a priori prediction of crown fire spread rates. This study presents a brief review of the development and structure of the model followed by a discussion of recent modifications made to formulate a fully predictive model. The model is based on the assumption that radiant energy transfer dominates energy exchange between the fire and unignited fuel with provisions for convective cooling of the fuels ahead of the fire front. Model predictions are compared against measured spread rates of selected experimental fires conducted during the International Crown Fire Modelling Experiment. Results of the comparison indicate that the closed form of the model accurately predicts the relative response of fire spread rate to fuel and environment variables but overpredicts the magnitude of fire spread rates.


2005 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Luc Dupuy ◽  
Dominique Morvan

The propagation of a wildfire through a Mediterranean pine stand was simulated using a multiphase physical model of fire behaviour. The heterogeneous character of the vegetation was taken into account using families of solid particles, i.e. the solid phases (foliage, twigs, grass). The thermal decomposition of the solid fuel by drying and pyrolysis, and the combustion of chars were considered, as well as the radiative and convective heat transfer between the gas and the vegetation. In the gaseous phase, turbulence was modelled using a two transport equations model (RNG k–ϵ) and the rate of combustion, which was assumed to be controlled by the turbulent mixing of fuel and oxygen, was calculated using an eddy dissipation concept. The radiation transfer equation, which includes absorption and emission of both the gas–soot mixture and the vegetation, was solved to calculate the contribution of radiation to the energy balance equations. Numerical solutions were calculated in a two-dimensional domain (vertical plane). Results showed the ability of this approach to simulate the propagation of a crown fire and to test the efficiency of a fuel break with success. The effects of the terrain slope were also tested. Some effects on fire behaviour of vortices resulting from the interaction of the wind flow with the canopy layer are shown.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. e02S ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Rodríguez y Silva ◽  
Mercedes Guijarro ◽  
Javier Madrigal ◽  
Enrique Jiménez ◽  
Juan R. Molina ◽  
...  

Aims of study: To conduct the first full-scale crown fire experiment carried out in a Mediterranean conifer stand in Spain; to use different data sources to assess crown fire initiation and spread models, and to evaluate the role of convection in crown fire initiation.Area of study: The Sierra Morena mountains (Coordinates ETRS89 30N: X: 284793-285038; Y: 4218650-4218766), southern Spain, and the outdoor facilities of the Lourizán Forest Research Centre, northwestern Spain.Material and methods: The full-scale crown fire experiment was conducted in a young Pinus pinea stand. Field data were compared with data predicted using the most used crown fire spread models. A small-scale experiment was developed with Pinus pinaster trees to evaluate the role of convection in crown fire initiation. Mass loss calorimeter tests were conducted with P. pinea needles to estimate residence time of the flame, which was used to validate the crown fire spread model.Main results: The commonly used crown fire models underestimated the crown fire spread rate observed in the full-scale experiment, but the proposed new integrated approach yielded better fits. Without wind-forced convection, tree crowns did not ignite until flames from an intense surface fire contacted tree foliage. Bench-scale tests based on radiation heat flux therefore offer a limited insight to full-scale phenomena.Research highlights: Existing crown fire behaviour models may underestimate the rate of spread of crown fires in many Mediterranean ecosystems. New bench-scale methods based on flame buoyancy and more crown field experiments allowing detailed measurements of fire behaviour are needed.


2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. Keyes ◽  
Kevin L. O'Hara

Abstract Forest managers are expressing a growing interest in proactively reducing susceptibility to crown fires, but the quantitative basis for defining specific stand targets and prescribing silvicultural regimes for this objective is lacking. A procedure is presented for creating resistant stand structures that exploits the relationship between crown fire development and characteristics of stand structure. The BEHAVE surface fire model was integrated with modified versions of the Van Wagner crown ignition and crown fire spread equations in order to quantify structural targets for mitigative silvicultural practices. The procedure tolerates an array of input data types for weather, site, and surface fuel variables so that hazard-reducing guidelines are tailored to specific site and stand conditions. Suggested strategies for achieving crown fire-resistant stand targets include pruning, low thinning, and surface fuel management. West. J. Appl. For. 17(2):101–109.


2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert Simeoni ◽  
Pierre Salinesi ◽  
Frédéric Morandini

Vegetation cover is a heterogeneous medium composed of different kinds of fuels and non-combustible parts. Some properties of real fires arise from this heterogeneity. Creating heterogeneous fuel areas may be useful both in land management and in firefighting by reducing fire intensity and fire rate of spread. The spreading of a fire through a heterogeneous medium was studied with a two-dimensional reaction–diffusion physical model of fire spread. Randomly distributed combustible and non-combustible square elements constituted the heterogeneous fuel. Two main characteristics of the fire were directly computed by the model: the size of the zone influenced by the heat transferred from the fire front and the ignition condition of vegetation. The model was able to provide rate of fire spread, temperature distribution and energy transfers. The influence on the fire properties of the ratio between the amount of combustible elements and the total amount of elements was studied. The results provided the same critical fire behaviour as described in both percolation theory and laboratory experiments but the results were quantitatively different because the neighbourhood computed by the model varied in time and space with the geometry of the fire front. The simulations also qualitatively reproduced fire behaviour for heterogeneous fuel layers as observed in field experiments. This study shows that physical models can be used to study fire spreading through heterogeneous fuels, and some potential applications are proposed about the use of heterogeneity as a complementary tool for fuel management and firefighting.


1999 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 247 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.M. Wotton ◽  
R.S. McAlpine ◽  
M.W. Hobbs

To determine the effect of fire front width on surface fire spread rates, a series of simultaneously ignited experimental fires was carried out in a pine plantation. Fires were ignited in plots with widths ranging from 0.5 m to 10 m and were burned in low wind conditions. Flame lengths were small in all fires, ranging from 20 cm to 60 cm. Since pre-heating of the forest litter from flame radiation is assumed to be an important mechanism in the spread of low intensity, low wind surface fires, it then follows that the width of a flaming front should effect on the heating of the fuel to ignition temperatures. Total flame radiation was also measured at a point 50 cm ahead of the advancing flame front for a number of the fires. Experimental results indicate that a flame radiation measured ahead of the fire stays fairly constant once the flame width is between 2 and 5 m. Theoretical flame radiation calculations confirm this trend. Rates of spread between the 5 and 10 metre width fires also appear to be similar; this indicates that, for the type of fires studied, once flame width is greater than about 2 m, radiation from any extra width of fire front has little effect on spread rate.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph J. O'Brien ◽  
E. Louise Loudermilk ◽  
Benjamin Hornsby ◽  
Andrew T. Hudak ◽  
Benjamin C. Bright ◽  
...  

Wildland fire radiant energy emission is one of the only measurements of combustion that can be made at wide spatial extents and high temporal and spatial resolutions. Furthermore, spatially and temporally explicit measurements are critical for making inferences about fire effects and useful for examining patterns of fire spread. In this study we describe our methods for capturing and analysing spatially and temporally explicit long-wave infrared (LWIR) imagery from the RxCADRE (Prescribed Fire Combustion and Atmospheric Dynamics Research Experiment) project and examine the usefulness of these data in investigating fire behaviour and effects. We compare LWIR imagery captured at fine and moderate spatial and temporal resolutions (from 1 cm2 to 1 m2; and from 0.12 to 1 Hz) using both nadir and oblique measurements. We analyse fine-scale spatial heterogeneity of fire radiant power and energy released in several experimental burns. There was concurrence between the measurements, although the oblique view estimates of fire radiative power were consistently higher than the nadir view estimates. The nadir measurements illustrate the significance of fuel characteristics, particularly type and connectivity, in driving spatial variability at fine scales. The nadir and oblique measurements illustrate the usefulness of the data for describing the location and movement of the fire front at discrete moments in time at these fine and moderate resolutions. Spatially and temporally resolved data from these techniques show promise to effectively link the combustion environment with post-fire processes, remote sensing at larger scales and wildland fire modelling efforts.


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-215
Author(s):  
B. J. Stocks ◽  
M. E. Alexander ◽  
B. M. Wotton ◽  
C. N. Stefner ◽  
M. D. Flannigan ◽  
...  

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