Characterisation of fire smoke emissions from fire retardant wood
(2024) 4th European Symposium on Fire Safety Science – ESFSS 2024 In Journal of Physics: Conference Series- Abstract
- Fire retardants are extensively used to reduce the flammability (combustibility) of wood–based construction materials in an effort to improve fire safety of buildings. However, little is known of the composition and potential risks to human health of smoke emissions produced from combustion of fire retardant treated wood. To help understand the risk to human health, fire smoke emissions produced from three different wood materials; wood without fire retardant, fire retardant wood, and aged fire retardant wood were analysed. The materials were exposed to a heat flux of 50 kW/m2 in a cone calorimeter according to ISO standard 5660-1. The fire gases and soot, measured as equivalent black carbon (eBC), produced were quantified using Fourier... (More)
- Fire retardants are extensively used to reduce the flammability (combustibility) of wood–based construction materials in an effort to improve fire safety of buildings. However, little is known of the composition and potential risks to human health of smoke emissions produced from combustion of fire retardant treated wood. To help understand the risk to human health, fire smoke emissions produced from three different wood materials; wood without fire retardant, fire retardant wood, and aged fire retardant wood were analysed. The materials were exposed to a heat flux of 50 kW/m2 in a cone calorimeter according to ISO standard 5660-1. The fire gases and soot, measured as equivalent black carbon (eBC), produced were quantified using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and an aethalometer, respectively. Our findings show that fire retardant wood produces substantially less soot mass than non-fire-retardant wood. However, the fire retardant wood produces more toxic gases, e.g. HCl, than both the wood without fire retardant and aged fire retardant wood. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/c3f54f45-e7a1-43ea-9536-262de12fadd1
- author
- Arinaitwe, Evalyne
LU
; Rex, Johannes
LU
; Wilkens Flecknoe-Brown, Konrad
LU
; Malmborg, Vilhelm
LU
; Pagels, Joakim LU and McNamee, Margaret S. LU
- organization
-
- LTH Profile Area: Aerosols
- Division of Fire Safety Engineering
- LTH Profile Area: Circular Building Sector
- LTH Profile Area: The Energy Transition
- LU Profile Area: Light and Materials
- LTH Profile Area: Nanoscience and Semiconductor Technology
- NanoLund: Centre for Nanoscience
- Ergonomics and Aerosol Technology
- Metalund
- publishing date
- 2024
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Journal of Physics: Conference Series
- pages
- 7 pages
- publisher
- IOP Publishing
- conference name
- 4th European Symposium on Fire Safety Science – ESFSS 2024
- conference location
- Barcelona, Spain
- conference dates
- 2024-10-09 - 2024-10-11
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85212140508
- ISSN
- 1742-6596
- DOI
- 10.1088/1742-6596/2885/1/012033
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c3f54f45-e7a1-43ea-9536-262de12fadd1
- date added to LUP
- 2024-11-30 20:53:55
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 14:25:53
@article{c3f54f45-e7a1-43ea-9536-262de12fadd1, abstract = {{Fire retardants are extensively used to reduce the flammability (combustibility) of wood–based construction materials in an effort to improve fire safety of buildings. However, little is known of the composition and potential risks to human health of smoke emissions produced from combustion of fire retardant treated wood. To help understand the risk to human health, fire smoke emissions produced from three different wood materials; wood without fire retardant, fire retardant wood, and aged fire retardant wood were analysed. The materials were exposed to a heat flux of 50 kW/m2 in a cone calorimeter according to ISO standard 5660-1. The fire gases and soot, measured as equivalent black carbon (eBC), produced were quantified using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and an aethalometer, respectively. Our findings show that fire retardant wood produces substantially less soot mass than non-fire-retardant wood. However, the fire retardant wood produces more toxic gases, e.g. HCl, than both the wood without fire retardant and aged fire retardant wood.}}, author = {{Arinaitwe, Evalyne and Rex, Johannes and Wilkens Flecknoe-Brown, Konrad and Malmborg, Vilhelm and Pagels, Joakim and McNamee, Margaret S.}}, issn = {{1742-6596}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{IOP Publishing}}, series = {{Journal of Physics: Conference Series}}, title = {{Characterisation of fire smoke emissions from fire retardant wood}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/2885/1/012033}}, doi = {{10.1088/1742-6596/2885/1/012033}}, year = {{2024}}, }