Thermal and calorimetric investigations of some vegetative fuels

Author:

Moinuddin Khalid1ORCID,Arun Malavika1,Filkov Alex2,Joseph Paul1,Guerrieri Maurice1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Sustainable Industries and Liveable Cities Victoria University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences, Faculty of Science University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractBushfires pose a significant threat to numerous countries, often causing vast property damages and loss of lives. Efforts to combat and manage these fires heavily rely on predicting the fires' rate of spread and intensity. A significant component of these predictions involves understanding the thermophysical characteristics of vegetative fuels. The accuracy of predictive models (especially physical models) also depends on obtaining precise thermophysical and combustion parameters. This research aims to provide a comprehensive set of thermal degradation and combustion parameters for surface and near‐surface fuel samples collected during prescribed fire experiment conducted in April 2022 in Little Desert National Park, Victoria, Australia. Firstly, fuel properties like fuel height, moisture content, bulk density, fuel load and heat of combustion were meticulously characterized for both surface and near‐surface samples. Then activation energies for degradation reactions were determined using the Flynn–Wall–Ozawa method and for the determination of pre‐exponential factors, in most cases these reactions closely aligned with a Second order model. This was followed by determination of other parameters such as heat of reaction, specific heat and conductivity. It was found that the density, activation energy and heat of combustion did not vary significantly across the six samples under question. The comprehensive set of obtained parameters will likely help to facilitate better predictions in fire propagation modelling.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference43 articles.

1. Impact of Australia's catastrophic 2019/20 bushfire season on communities and environment. Retrospective analysis and current trends

2. WernerJ LyonsS.The size of Australia's bushfire crisis captured in five big numbers.ABC News. 2020.

3. GreenM.Australia's massive fires could become routine climate scientists warn. London REUTERS. 2020.

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