This study validates numerical models for mixed polymer combustion in a B-707 aircraft cargo compartment against Federal Aviation Administration test data. A simplified approach using a predefined mass loss rate was compared with a detailed model coupling in-depth heat transfer and pyrolysis kinetics based on the assumption of negligible co-pyrolysis effects. Both approaches reliably captured smoke dynamics and light transmission. The detailed model predicted the mass loss rate with high accuracy, matching the experimental value of 0.11 g/s at 200 s after the ignition. However, it significantly overpredicted the heat release rate with a peak value of 8 kW versus 5 kW in the experiment. This discrepancy was examined through a sensitivity analysis of key parameters: the radiative fraction, heat of combustion, turbulence model, and pyrolysis kinetics. The Smagorinsky model best captures the growth pattern of the heat release and mass loss rates, despite its larger deviation from the experimental data compared to other models. The analysis revealed that the radiative fraction and the activation energy of high heat-of-combustion materials like high-density polyethylene are the most influential parameters. One possible solution to the overestimation is the calibration of the activation energy and heat of combustion values for high-energy materials like HDPE. The results confirm the detailed model’s physical realism for fire spread modeling and highlight a path for improving its heat release rate predictions. Further investigation is required across a wider range of computational cases with varying sample mass fractions, compositions, geometries, and boundary conditions to establish the broader applicability of this approach.
Ponomarev et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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