Fire accidents in road tunnels can cause a significant number of fatalities and severe damage to tunnel structures. The tunnel European directive applies to the trans-European road network and requires the use of active smoke control systems in most tunnels longer than 1000 m. Research has investigated whether shorter tunnels without active smoke control systems are safe. If smoke contaminates the lower layer where people evacuate, it can impair visibility. This disturbs egress and may cause intoxication and, eventually, death. The FireFoam computer code was applied to the Memorial Tunnel fire ventilation tests for validation. This work investigates the effect of varying the heat release rate (HRR), ranging from 6 to 100 MW, under a wind velocity of 0.77 m/s and in the absence of wind. Results show that high HRR moves the start of lower layer smoke contamination closer to the fire source, reducing the distance from 390 m at 14 MW to as close as 210 m at 100 MW. An analytical model was developed to predict the distance from the fire source where smoke can contaminate the lower layer and was subsequently improved to account for HRR variation.
Mateus et al. (Sat,) studied this question.