This paper deals with the bulk density determination of char, which is an important input parameter for numerical simulations of pyrolysis. The aim was to develop a time and cost‐effective, non‐destructive, and repeatable method capable to determine the bulk density of highly porous, fragile wood and engineered wood samples of various shapes, namely char of spruce and oriented strand board. Char samples were prepared in a cone calorimeter under various heat flux exposures. Photogrammetry was chosen for this purpose. A detailed photogrammetric measurement procedure consisting of sample preparation, sample measurement and software reconstruction was designed and validated. It was found that the bulk density of char depends on the virgin material and the way char was formed. The spruce and oriented strand board char bulk density value is provided to be used in pyrolysis modeling and compared to literature.
This paper presents a series of full-scale tests conducted with office furniture made from OSB boards. Ignition source (30 kW gas burner) position and enclosure effects, free burn vs. ISO 9705 room, were evaluated from the perspective of instantaneous (HRR) and total heat (THR) released by the fuel packages. It was found that both of the evaluated factors have impact primarily on HRR – the peak ranging from 874 kW to 1 154 kW was delayed by approx. 50 to 60 s in the free-burn experiments; the THR remained relatively consistent at approx. 875 ± 30 MJ, meaning that in the observed period very similar amounts of fuel were burned. The thermal feedback within the enclosure seemed to be partially counteracted by the lack of oxygen, resulting in slightly higher HRR in free-burn test following the first peak. The findings of the research are applicable to fire hazard prediction by fire modelling.
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