Traditional road tunnel ventilation systems suffer from high energy consumption and limited effectiveness in fire smoke control. Thus, there is a pressing need to develop advanced air purification technologies that integrate low energy demand with efficient smoke mitigation capabilities. In this study, a self-developed negative ion purification system was implemented, and systematic full-scale experimental investigations were conducted in both a test tunnel and an operational road tunnel to evaluate its performance in air purification and smoke suppression under normal operation and fire conditions. Key parameters, including negative ion concentration, particulate matter concentration, carbon monoxide (CO) concentration, and smoke distribution characteristics, were measured to elucidate smoke evolution behavior and the underlying mechanisms influenced by negative ions. The results show that the negative ion purification system can rapidly establish a high-concentration negative ion field within the tunnel space. Under normal operating conditions, negative ions markedly reduce particulate matter concentrations and their fluctuations, thereby effectively improving tunnel air quality. Under fire conditions, the system maintains high purification efficiency, with significant reductions in particulate matter concentration observed in the test tunnel and clear suppression of longitudinal particulate transport in the real tunnel. In particular, PM10 exhibits a higher removal efficiency. In addition, negative ions promote particle agglomeration and gravitational settling, accelerate CO dilution and dispersion, and significantly improve tunnel visibility. The results demonstrate that the negative ion purification system exhibits strong applicability and considerable engineering potential across different spatial scales and fire scenarios.
Han et al. (Thu,) studied this question.