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Fire Whirl Investigation

Luketa, Anay L.

A series of experiments were performed with the objective of achieving an extreme thermal environment by creating a fire whirl in an enclosure in facilities at the Thermal Test Complex (TTC) at Sandia National Laboratories. The motivation for the experiments is based on results from previous experiments performed at Sandia in an igloo representing a mock weapon's storage facility. In that test series, a fire whirl developed within the igloo resulting in extremely high heat flux levels. This environment was created with a pool fire of 4.6-m in diameter and was not under controlled, repeatable conditions. The objective of the current tests is to have the ability to create this environment in a repeatable controlled environment at a smaller scale, namely with a pool fire not above 3-m diameter effectively, thereby allowing for repeatable, cost-effective testing. In FY15, six tests were conducted in the Crosswind Test Facility (XTF), using a 1.77 m square pan. In FY16, three tests were conducted in the Fire Laboratory for Accreditation of Modeling by Experiment (FLAME) using a 3-m diameter pan. Both of these test series utilized the same enclosure. In FY17, a single test was performed in XTF using a 2.7 m square pan using a modified enclosure which included a ceiling. All tests used Jet-A as the fuel. The wind speed and gap width of the enclosure were varied for the FY15 XTF tests and the gap width and effect of insulation on the enclosure walls were varied for the FY16 FLAME tests. Fuel regression rates, heat flux, and gas velocity measurements were obtained. The results from the FY15 and FY16 test series indicate that fuel regression rates and peak heat flux levels are a factor of two higher than non-fire whirl pool fires of equivalent diameter. The results from the FY17 test using an enclosure with a ceiling met the objective of the test series by achieving temperatures of nearly 1400degC and heat flux levels of 400 kW/m 2 .