Prediction of the spread of smoke in a huge transit terminal subway station under six different fire scenarios

► We study the dispersion of fire-induced buoyancy driven smoke in a subway station with atrium. ► We use natural ventilation to exhaust smoke under fire cases. ► It brings a new perspective to the field of the smoke control of atrium fire. ► It provide theoretical basis for evacuation with differen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tunnelling and underground space technology 2012-09, Vol.31, p.128-138
Hauptverfasser: Gao, Ran, Li, Angui, Hao, Xinpeng, Lei, Wenjun, Deng, Baoshun
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container_issue
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container_title Tunnelling and underground space technology
container_volume 31
creator Gao, Ran
Li, Angui
Hao, Xinpeng
Lei, Wenjun
Deng, Baoshun
description ► We study the dispersion of fire-induced buoyancy driven smoke in a subway station with atrium. ► We use natural ventilation to exhaust smoke under fire cases. ► It brings a new perspective to the field of the smoke control of atrium fire. ► It provide theoretical basis for evacuation with different fire source locations. A fire at a subway station can cause tremendous loss of property and heavy casualties, and smoke has been reported to be the main cause of these casualties. This article reports the use of Large Eddy Simulation (LES) simulation to study the dispersion of fire-induced smoke that is buoyancy driven in a subway station. This station was located within a huge transit terminal at Xi’an, China. The influence of natural and mechanical ventilation was studied in this station, which has atrium height ranging from 0 to 15m, roof window dimensions of 1×1m2 and 5×1m2, and rates of air change ranging between 5 and 11h−1. In addition, six different fire-source locations with heat-release rates (HRRs) of 4 and 7.5MW are discussed. Four grid systems were compared, and the sensitivity of these grid systems was checked to ensure grid independence. Preliminary analysis of results indicates that the atrium of a subway station poses significant limitations on the horizontal dispersion of smoke. A large soot-density gradient has also been observed in stations with a high atrium. An exponential relationship has been proposed to define the correlation between atrium height and duration of smoke filling, with a relative coefficient (R) of 0.9995. The results indicate that mechanical ventilation can markedly control the spread of smoke in the horizontal direction but it has little effect on the dispersion of smoke in the vertical direction. If a fire starts directly below the atrium, most of the smoke generated will converge toward the upper regions of the atrium. In addition, the simulation helps predict the maximum soot density of smoke generated by different heat releases (4 and 7.5MW).
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.tust.2012.04.013
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subjects Applied sciences
Building structure
Building technical equipments
Buildings
Buildings. Public works
Computation methods. Tables. Charts
Construction (buildings and works)
Dispersions
Exact sciences and technology
Fire protection
Fire safety. Legislation
Fires
Horizontal
Mechanical ventilation
Natural ventilation
Public facilities (municipal, law court, etc.)
Smoke
Spreads
Stations
Structural analysis. Stresses
Subway station
Subway stations
Transit
Types of buildings
Underground structure
title Prediction of the spread of smoke in a huge transit terminal subway station under six different fire scenarios
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