Publication date: Available online 6 April 2017
Source:Fire Safety Journal
Author(s): Subrata Bhattacharjee, Luca Carmignani, Gregory Celniker, Blake Rhoades
Spread rate is an overall property of flame propagation that characterizes the condition of a flame better than any other property. As a result, prediction and measurement of spread rate is central to flame spread studies over solid fuels. Significant amount of data have been collected over last four decades of research on flame spread over various fuels under different conditions. In most of these studies, however, only average spread rate is reported which is adequate for steady phenomena. Given that a flame may not face the same conditions during the spread, it is possible for the spread rate to change during the duration of the spread continually. In this work a methodology for image analysis is presented with the goal of evaluating instantaneous spread rate to study time-dependent phenomena. The parameters that control the error and time resolution of the flame spread history are identified, and a sensitivity study is carried out to validate the results of a scale analysis. A MATLAB-based Flame Image Analyzer (FIA) package is developed and applied to flame spread videos recorded in several experiments in different regimes of opposed-flow flame spread. An expression for the error in spread rate for a given time resolution is expressed in terms of the imaging parameters. The two parameters that are found most important are the pixel resolution and the frame rate. A non-dimensional imaging parameter is identified that is shown to govern the quality of imaging for spread rate measurement. Theoretical prediction from the error analysis is confirmed by doing various case studies using the Analyzer.
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