Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

A New Method for Quantifying Fire Growth Rates Using Statistical and Empirical Data – Applied to Determine the Effect of Arson

Nilsson, Martin ; Johansson, Nils LU orcid and Van Hees, Patrick LU (2014) 11th International Symposium on Fire Safety Science
Abstract
When designing fire safety of buildings the fire growth rate is an important parameter, in large affecting the

overall fire safety level within the building. Generally, a deterministic fire growth rate is used raising the

question whether the resulting design arrives at a reasonable level of safety. A method was developed to

obtain distributions of fire growth rates in specific building types. The new method uses data from two

sources: fire statistics, and fire growth rates on single objects obtained by calorimetry experiments. In

addition, the method was demonstrated by a case study investigating whether the overall fire growth rate is

faster for commercial buildings if arson... (More)
When designing fire safety of buildings the fire growth rate is an important parameter, in large affecting the

overall fire safety level within the building. Generally, a deterministic fire growth rate is used raising the

question whether the resulting design arrives at a reasonable level of safety. A method was developed to

obtain distributions of fire growth rates in specific building types. The new method uses data from two

sources: fire statistics, and fire growth rates on single objects obtained by calorimetry experiments. In

addition, the method was demonstrated by a case study investigating whether the overall fire growth rate is

faster for commercial buildings if arson fires are included than if they are not. The results show that there is

a considerably higher fire growth rate when arson fires are accounted for, e.g. designing for a fast fire

growth rate of 0.047 kW/s2 covers 97% of accidental fires (arson excluded) but only 91% of all fires (arson

included). The results indicate that there is a need to account for arson fires when designing buildings when

the probability of arson is high. The developed method provides means to account for arson in fire safety

engineering, and to further quantify the achieved fire safety level. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
fire growth, statistics, building code, design fire, fire safety engineering
host publication
[Host publication title missing]
pages
14 pages
publisher
International Association of Fire Safety Science
conference name
11th International Symposium on Fire Safety Science
conference location
Christchruch, New Zealand
conference dates
2014-02-09 - 2014-02-14
external identifiers
  • scopus:84975122987
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d6d415ec-5487-40a8-a6b7-15bd6df9b462 (old id 4301137)
alternative location
http://www.iafss.org/publications/fss/11/44/view
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:37:44
date last changed
2022-03-15 22:00:20
@inproceedings{d6d415ec-5487-40a8-a6b7-15bd6df9b462,
  abstract     = {{When designing fire safety of buildings the fire growth rate is an important parameter, in large affecting the <br/><br>
overall fire safety level within the building. Generally, a deterministic fire growth rate is used raising the <br/><br>
question whether the resulting design arrives at a reasonable level of safety. A method was developed to <br/><br>
obtain distributions of fire growth rates in specific building types. The new method uses data from two <br/><br>
sources: fire statistics, and fire growth rates on single objects obtained by calorimetry experiments. In <br/><br>
addition, the method was demonstrated by a case study investigating whether the overall fire growth rate is <br/><br>
faster for commercial buildings if arson fires are included than if they are not. The results show that there is <br/><br>
a considerably higher fire growth rate when arson fires are accounted for, e.g. designing for a fast fire <br/><br>
growth rate of 0.047 kW/s2 covers 97% of accidental fires (arson excluded) but only 91% of all fires (arson <br/><br>
included). The results indicate that there is a need to account for arson fires when designing buildings when <br/><br>
the probability of arson is high. The developed method provides means to account for arson in fire safety <br/><br>
engineering, and to further quantify the achieved fire safety level.}},
  author       = {{Nilsson, Martin and Johansson, Nils and Van Hees, Patrick}},
  booktitle    = {{[Host publication title missing]}},
  keywords     = {{fire growth; statistics; building code; design fire; fire safety engineering}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{International Association of Fire Safety Science}},
  title        = {{A New Method for Quantifying Fire Growth Rates Using Statistical and Empirical Data – Applied to Determine the Effect of Arson}},
  url          = {{http://www.iafss.org/publications/fss/11/44/view}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}