Investigating the influence of outdoor temperature variations on fire-induced smoke behavior in an atrium-type underground metro station using hybrid ventilation systems
Journal article
Xu, D., Li, Y., Du, T., Zhong, H., Huang, Y., Li, L. and Xiangling, D. (2024). Investigating the influence of outdoor temperature variations on fire-induced smoke behavior in an atrium-type underground metro station using hybrid ventilation systems. Energy. 287, p. 129570. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2023.129570
Authors | Xu, D., Li, Y., Du, T., Zhong, H., Huang, Y., Li, L. and Xiangling, D. |
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Abstract | Underground metro systems are expanding rapidly worldwide, necessitating research on energy-efficient ventilation systems, fire safety, and smoke control. This study investigates the optimisation of hybrid mechanical-natural ventilation for smoke control in complex metro stations. Full-scale winter/summer experiments and numerical simulations examined a double-deck atrium-type station. Results demonstrate the atrium fires are more significantly impacted by outdoor temperature variations versus concourse/platform fires, with a 70 K versus 30 K temperature rise above the fire respectively. The heat of the gathered high-temperature smoke inside the atrium can reach up to 900 K under a 5 MW train fire energy release. The dimensionless Archimedes number (Ar) defines the ratio of thermal buoyancy to gravitational forces. Cold exterior winter air (Ar<1) entering via the atrium ceiling openings restricted vertical smoke diffusion, enabling enhanced lateral propagation. With rising outdoor temperatures from −20 °C to 10 °C (Ar<1), the natural smoke extraction efficiency increased from 0 to 18 %, coupled with vertical airflow velocities accelerating from −3.5 m/s to 1.5 m/s. When outdoor temperatures were between 10 °C and 40 °C (Ar>1), airflow velocity only changed slightly. Empirical models predict internal temperature profiles as a function of external meteorology. The findings provide crucial engineering insights into integrating weather data and adaptable ventilation protocols for scenario-based smoke prevention/mitigation. Further work should examine seasonal variations beyond the tested -20‒40 °C range. Overall, considering outdoor climate effects allows 30 % optimisation of hybrid ventilation systems for fire safety in underground metro stations. This study promotes technological advances in energy-efficient transport infrastructure resilience. |
Keywords | Fire safety; Atrium-type underground metro station; Hybrid ventilation systems; Smoke extraction efficiency; Fire energy release |
Year | 2024 |
Journal | Energy |
Journal citation | 287, p. 129570 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
ISSN | 0360-5442 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2023.129570 |
Web address (URL) | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S036054422302964X?via%3Dihub |
Publication dates | |
Online | 05 Nov 2023 |
Publication process dates | |
Accepted | 01 Nov 2023 |
Deposited | 20 Aug 2024 |
Accepted author manuscript | License File Access Level Open |
https://openresearch.lsbu.ac.uk/item/967wx
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Accepted author manuscript
Munscript-Investigating the influence of outdoor temperature variations on fire-induced smoke behavior in an atrium-type underground metro s.docx | ||
License: CC BY 4.0 | ||
File access level: Open |
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