User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
FAÏR-FAI-tingNoun
- extinguishing a fire; the profession of being a firefighter
- In the context of "by extension": solving an urgent problem
Extensive Definition
Firefighting is the act of extinguishing
destructive fires. A
firefighter fights
these fires to prevent destruction of life, property and the
environment. Firefighting is a highly technical profession which
requires years of training and education in order to become
proficient.
Science of firefighting
Historically, physicists created a graphical representation detailing the three elements of fire (fire triangle). In recent years, one more point has been added, creating the fire tetrahedron. The four elements needed to sustain combustion are:To extinguish a fire, it is necessary to remove
one or more of the four components of combustion. Removing any of
these will not allow combustion to continue. Firefighters work by
- Eliminating exposure of fuel that may be ignited by nearby flames or radiant heat
- Cooling the fuel below flashpoint (The temperature when a fuel is combustible)
- Containing and extinguishing the fire
- Removing debris and extinguishing all hidden fires to prevent rekindling
Firefighters' duties
Firefighters' goals are to save life, property and the environment. A fire can rapidly spread and endanger many lives; however, with modern firefighting techniques, catastrophe is usually, but not always, avoided. To prevent fires from starting a firefighter's duties include public education and conducting fire inspections. Because firefighters are often the first responders to people in critical conditions, firefighters provide basic life support as emergency medical technicians or advanced life support as licensed paramedics.Hazards Caused By Fire
The primary risk to people in a fire is smoke
inhalation (breathing in smoke;
most of those killed in fires die from this, not from burns). The
risks of smoke include:
As an example, plastics inside a car can
generate 200,000 m3 of smoke at a rate of 20-30 m3/sec..
Firefighters carry self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) (an open-circuit
positive pressure compressed air system) to prevent smoke
inhalation.
Obvious risks stem from the effects of heat. Even
without contact with the flames (conduction),
there are a number of comparably serious risks: burns from
radiated heat, contact with a hot object, hot gases (e.g., air),
steam and hot and/or toxic smoke. Firefighters
are equipped with personal protective equipment (PPE) that includes
fire-resistant clothing (nomex or polybenzimidazole
fiber (PBI)) and helmets that limit the transmission of heat
towards the body.
The heat can make pressurised gas cylinders and
tanks explode,
producing what is called a BLEVE (Boiling Liquid
Expanding Vapor Explosion). Some chemical products such as ammonium
nitrate fertilizers can also explode.
Explosions can cause physical
trauma or potentially serious blast or shrapnel injuries.
Heat causes human flesh to burn as fuel causing
severe medical problems. Depending upon the heat of the fire, burns
can occur in a fraction of a second. A first
degree burn (on the skin surface) is extremely painful. A
second degree burn is a burn into the skin, and can cause shock,
infections, and dehydration and if left untreated often results in
death. Second degree burns compromise nerve tissue and are not
painful. Third degree burns leave muscles and internal organs
exposed from completely destroyed skin. If the person survives the
shock and exposure to germs, medical treatment is extremely
difficult.
Additional risks of firefighting encompass the
following:
- vision can be obscured by the smoke: a person inside the building may not be able to see, can fall, or become disoriented and lost; becoming trapped and killed by the smoke or fire.
- the building can collapse on its occupants.
Reconnaissance and reading the fire
The first step of the operations is a
reconnaissance to search for the origin of the fire (which may not
be obvious for an indoor fire, especially when there are no
witnesses), and spot the specific risks and the possible
casualties. Any fire occurring outside may not require
reconnaissance; on the other hand, a fire in a cellar or an
underground car park with only a few centimeters of visibility may
require a long reconnaissance to spot the seat of the fire.
The "reading" of the fire is the analysis by the
firefighters of the forewarnings of a thermal accident (flashover, backdraft, smoke
explosion), which is performed during the reconnaissance and
the fire suppression maneuvers. The main signs are:
- hot zones, which can be detected with a gloved hand, especially by touching a door before opening it;
- the presence of soot on the windows, which usually means that combustion is incomplete and thus there is a lack of air
- smoke goes in and out from the door frame, as if the fire breathes, which usually means a lack of air to support combustion;
- spraying water on the ceiling with a short pulse of a diffused
spray (e.g. cone with
an opening angle of 60°) to test the heat of the smoke;
- when the temperature is moderate, the water falls down in drops with a sound of rain;
- when the temperature is high, it vaporises with a hiss.
Ideally, part of reconnaissance is to consult an
existing Preplan for the
building. This would provide knowledge of existing structures, fire
fighter hazards, and can include strategies and tactics.
Suppressing the fuel and the energy
The first method is to remove fuel for the fire
by, for example, cutting off the domestic gas supply and moving
combustible objects from the path of the fire. When the activation
energy is still present, it is also useful to switch it off; this
will not stop a fire, but will help in controlling a starting fire
and will prevent a new fire from occurring.
The first action is thus to cut off the domestic
gas and electricity, and switch off working machines (motors). It
is also important to turn off ventilation and air conditioning, as
they supply oxygen which supports combustion and can dangerously
change the behaviour of the fire.
Use of water
Often, the main way to extinguish a fire is to
spray with water. The water has two roles:
- in contact with the fire, it vaporizes, and this vapour displaces the oxygen (the volume of water vapour is 1,700 times greater than liquid water); leaving the fire with not enough combustive agent to continue, and it dies out.
- the vaporization of water absorbs the heat; it cools the smoke, air, walls, objects in the room, etc., that could act as further fuel, and thus prevents one of the means that fires grow, which is by "jumping" to nearby heat/fuel sources to start new fires, which then combine.
Water may be accessed by pressurized fire
hydrant, pumped from water sources such as lakes or rivers,
delivered by tanker
truck, or dropped from aircraft tankers in fighting forest
fires.
Open air fire
For fires in the open, the seat of the fire is
sprayed with a straight spray: the cooling effect immediately
follows the "asphyxia" by vapor, and reduces the amount of water
required. A straight spray is used so the water arrives massively
to the seat without being vaporized before. A strong spray may also
have a mechanical effect: it can disperse the combustible product
and thus prevent the fire from starting again.
The fire is always fed with air, but the risk to
people is limited as they can move away, except in the case of
wildfires or bushfires where they can be
surrounded by the flames. But there might be a big risk of
expansion.
Spray is aimed at a surface, or object: for this
reason, the strategy is sometimes called two-dimensional attack or 2D
attack.
It might be necessary to protect specific items
(house, gas tank) against infrared radiation, and thus to use a
diffused spray between the fire and the object.
Breathing apparatus is often required as there is
still the risk of breathing in smoke or poisonous gases.
Closed volume fire
Until the 1970s, fires were
usually attacked while they declined, so the same strategy that was
used for open air fires was effective. In recent times, fires are
now attacked in their development phase as:
- firefighters arrive sooner;
- thermal insulation of houses confines the heat;
- modern materials, especially the polymers, produce a lot more heat than traditional materials (wood, plaster, stone, bricks, etc.).
Spraying of the seat of the fire directly can
have unfortunate and dramatic consequences: the water pushes air in
front of it, so the fire is supplied with extra oxygen before the
water reaches it. This activation of the fire, and the mixing of
the gases produced by the water flow, can create a flashover.
The most important issue is not the flames, but
control of the fire, i.e. the cooling of the smoke that can spread
and start distant fires, and that endanger the lives of people,
including firefighters. The volume must be cooled before the seat
is treated. This strategy originally of Swedish (Mats Rosander
& Krister Giselsson) origin, was further adapted by London Fire
Officer Paul Grimwood following a decade of operational use in
London's busy west-end district between 1984-94
(www.firetactics.com) and termed three-dimensional attack, or 3D
attack.
Use of a diffused spray was first proposed by
Chief Lloyd Layman of Parkersburg,
West Virginia Fire Department, at the Fire Department
Instructor's Conference (FDIC) in 1950 held in Memphis,
Tennessee, U.S.A.
Using Grimwood's modified '3D attack strategy'
the ceiling is first sprayed with short pulses of a diffused spray:
- it cools the smoke, thus the smoke is less likely to start a fire when it moves away;
- the pressure of the gas drops when it cools (law of ideal gases), thus it also reduces the mobility of the smoke and avoids a "backfire" of water vapour;
- it creates an inert "water vapour sky" which prevents roll-over (rolls of flames on the ceiling created by the burning of hot gases).
Only short pulses of water must be sprayed,
otherwise the spraying modifies the equilibrium, and the gases mix
instead of remaining stratified: the hot gases (initially at the
ceiling) move around the room and the temperature rises at the
ground, which is dangerous for firefighters. An alternative is to
cool all the atmosphere by spraying the whole atmosphere as if
drawing letters in the air ("pencilling").
The modern methods for an urban fire dictate the
use of a massive initial water flow, e.g. 500 L/min for each
fire
hose. The aim is to absorb as much heat as possible at the
beginning to stop the expansion of the sinister, and to reduce the
smoke. When the flow is too small, the cooling is not sufficient,
and the steam that is produced can burn firefighters (the drop of
pressure is too small and the vapor is pushed back). Although it
may seem paradoxical, the use of a strong flow with an efficient
fire hose and an efficient strategy (diffused sprayed, small
droplets) requires a smaller amount of water: once the temperature
is lowered, only a limited amount of water is necessary to suppress
the fire seat with a straight spray. For a living room of 50 m² (60
square yards), the required amount of water is estimated as 60 L
(15 gallons).
French fire-fighters used an alternative method
in the 1970s: they sprayed water on the hot walls to create a water
vapour atmosphere and asphyxiate the fire. This method is no longer
used because it was risky: the pressure created pushed the hot
gases and vapour towards the firefighters, causing severe burns,
and pushed the hot gases into other rooms where they could start a
new fire.
Asphyxiating a fire
In some cases, the use of water is undesirable:
- some chemical products react with water and produce poisonous gases, or even burn in contact with water (e.g. sodium);
- some products float on water, e.g. hydrocarbon (gasoline, oil, alcohol, etc.); a burning layer can then spread and extend;
- in case of a pressurised gas tank, it is necessary to avoid heat shocks that may damage the tank: the resulting decompression may produce a BLEVE.
It is then necessary to asphyxiate the fire. This
can be done in two ways:
- some chemical products react with the fuel and stop the combustion;
- a layer of water-based fire retardant foam is projected on the product by the fire hose, to keep the oxygen in air separated from the fuel.
Tactical ventilation or isolation of the fire
One of the main risks of a fire is the smoke: it carries heat and
poisonous gases, and obscures vision. In the case of a fire in a
closed location (building), two different strategies may be used:
isolation of the fire, or positive pressure ventilation.
Paul Grimwood introduced the concept of tactical
ventilation in the 1980s to encourage a more well thought out
approach to this aspect of firefighting. Following work with
Warrington Fire Research Consultants (FRDG 6/94) his terminology
and concepts were adopted officially by the UK fire service and are
now referred to throughout revised Home Office training manuals
(1996-97).
Paul Grimwood's original definition of his 1991
unified strategy stated that ....
tactical ventilation is either the venting, or
containment (isolation) actions by on-scene firefighters, used to
take control from the outset of a fire's burning regime, in an
effort to gain tactical advantage during interior structural
firefighting operations'.
Positive pressure ventilation (PPV) consists of using
a fan to
create excess pressure in a part of the building; this pressure
will push the smoke and the heat away, and thus secure the rescue
and fire fighting operations. It is necessary to have an exit for
the smoke, to know the building very well to predict where the
smoke will go, and to ensure that the doors remain open by wedging
or propping them. The main risk of this method is that it may
activate the fire, or even create a flashover, e.g. if the smoke
and the heat accumulate in a dead end.
Categorizing fires
Fires are sometimes categorized as "one alarm", "two alarm", "three alarm" (or higher) fires. There is no standard definition for what this means quantifiably, though it always refers to the level response by the local authorities. In some cities, the numeric rating refers to the number of fire stations that have been summoned to the fire. In others, the number counts the number of "dispatches" for additional personnel and equipment.http://www.nbc4.com/money/9208480/detail.htmlhttp://www.thevillager.com/villager_39/fouralarmfire.htmlAppendix : Calculation of the amount of water required to suppress a fire in a closed volume
In the case of a closed volume, it is easy to
compute the amount of water needed. The oxygen (O2) in air (21%) is
necessary for combustion. Whatever the
amount of fuel available (wood, paper, cloth), combustion will stop
when the air becomes "thin", i.e. when it contains less than 15%
oxygen. If additional air
cannot enter, we can calculate:
- The amount of water required to make the atmosphere inert, i.e. to prevent the pyrolysis gases to burn; this is the "volume computation";
- The amount of water required to cool the smoke, the atmosphere; this is the "thermal computation".
These computations are only valid when
considering a diffused spray which penetrates the entire volume;
this is not possible in the case of a high ceiling: the spray is
short and does not reach the upper layers of air. Consequently the
computations are not valid for large volumes such as barns or
warehouses: a warehouse of 1,000 m² (1,200 square yards) and 10 m
high (33 ft) represents 10,000 m3. In practice, such large volumes
are unlikely to be airtight anyway.
Volume computation
Fire needs air; if water vapour pushes all the
air away, the fuel can no longer burn. But the replacement of all
the air by water vapour is harmful for firefighters and other
people still in the building: the water vapour can carry much more
heat than air at the same temperature (one can be burnt by water
vapour at 100 °C (212 °F) above a boiling saucepan, whereas it is
possible to put an arm in an oven—without touching the
metal!—at 270 °C (520 °F) without damage). This amount of
water is thus an upper limit which should not actually be
reached.
The optimal, and minimum, amount of water to use
is the amount required to dilute the air to 15% oxygen: below this
concentration, the fire cannot burn.
The amount used should be between the optimal
value and the upper limit. Any additional water would just run on
the floor and cause water damage without contributing to fire
suppression.
Let:
- Vr be the volume of the room,
- Vv be the volume of vapour required,
- Vw be the volume of liquid water to create the Vv volume of vapour,
- V_v = 3571 \cdot V_w
- V_v = 1723 \cdot V_w
- V_v = V_r
- V_v = 0.286 \cdot V_r
Note that the formulas give the results in cubic
meters; which are multiplied by 1,000 to convert to liters.
Of course, a room is never really closed, gases
can go in (fresh air) and out (hot gases and water vapour) so the
computations will not be exact.
Notes
- indeed, the mass of one mole of water
is 18 g, a liter (0.001 m³) represents one kilogram i.e. 55.6
moles, and at 500 °C (773 K), 55.6 moles of an ideal gas at
atmospheric pressure represents a volume of 3.57 m³.
- same as above with a temperature of 100 °C (373 K), one liter of liquid water produces 1.723 m³ of vapour
- we consider that only Vr - Vv of the original room atmosphere remains (Vv has been replaced by water vapour). This atmosphere contains less than 21% of oxygen (some was used by the fire), so the remaining amount of oxygen represents less than 0,21·(Vr-Vv). The concentration of oxygen is thus less than 0,21·(Vr-Vv)/Vr, and we want this fraction to be 0.15 (15%).
- same as above with a temperature of 100 °C (373 K), one liter of liquid water produces 1.723 m³ of vapour
firefighting in German: Brandbekämpfung
firefighting in French: Lutte contre
l'incendie
firefighting in Japanese: 消防
firefighting in Dutch:
Brandbestrijding