Fire 1 Chapter 3
Mushrooming
Ceiling jet is also known as
Exothermic heat reaction
Chemical reaction between two or more materials that changes the materials and produces heat, flames, and toxic smoke
Endothermic heat reaction
Chemical reaction in which a substance absorbs heat energy
Carbon monoxide (CO)
Colorless, odorless, dangerous gas (both toxic and flammable) formed by the incomplete combustion of carbon. It combines more than 200 times as quickly with hemoglobin as oxygen, does decreases the bloods ability to carry oxygen
Class B
Involve flammable and combustible liquids and gases such as gasoline, oil, lacquer, paint, mineral spirits, and alcohol
Class A
Involve ordinary combustible materials such as wood, cloth, paper, rubber, grass, and any plastics
Class K
Involves oils and greases normally found in commercial kitchens in food preparation facilities using deep fryer's
Class B
Involving gases be extinguished by shutting off the gas supply. Liquids can be extinguished with appropriately applied foam and/or dry chemical agents
British thermal unit (Btu)
Is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1°F
Heat release rate (HRR)
Is the energy released per unit of time as a given fuel burns and is usually expressed in kilowatts (kW)
Fuel
Is the material or substance being oxidized are burned in the combustion process
Chemical Heat energy
Is the most common source of heat in combustion reactions
Autoignition temperature (ATI)
Is the temperature to which the surface of a substance must be heated for mission and self sustained combustion to occur
Chemical flame inhibition
Is when a Halon-replacement extinguishing agent interferes with this chemical reaction, forms a stable product, and terminates the combustion reaction
Lower explosive limit
LEL
Lower flammable limit
LFL
Vaporization
Process of evolution that changes a liquid into a gaseous state. The rate of vaporization depends on the substance involved, heat, and pressure.
Autoignition temperature
Same as ignition temperature accept no external ignition sources required for ignition because the material itself has been heated to ignition temperature
Flashover
Stage of a fire at which all services in object within a space have been heated to their ignition temperature in flame breaks out almost at once over the surface of all objects in the space
Decay
Stage of fire development when fuel is consumed in the energy released diminishes, and temperatures decrease during this stage the fire goes from ventilation controlled to fuel controlled
Incipient, Growth, Fully developed, Decay
Stages
Potential energy
Stored energy possessed by an object that can be released in the future to perform work
Fire point
Temperature at which a liquid fuel produces sufficient vapors to support combustion once the fuel is ignited. It is usually a few degrees above the flash point.
Autoignition, Piloted ignition
The _ temperature of a substance is always higher than its _ temperature
Celsius, Fahrenheit
The _ temperature scale is used in the metric system while the _ scale is used in the customary system.
Energy
The capacity to perform work
Pyrolysis
The chemical decomposition of a substance through the action of heat
Growth stage
The early stage of a fire during which fuel and oxygen are virtually unlimited. His face is characterized by rapidly increasing release of heat
Kinetic Energy
The energy possessed by a moving object
Reducing agent
The fuel that is being oxidized or burned during combustion
Heat of combustion
The total amount of that fuel is oxidized (burned)
Convection
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Fire triangle
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Radiation
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Saponification
A phenomenon that occurs when pictures of alkaline based chemicals and certain cooking oils come in contact resulting in the formation of a soapy film
Inorganic fuels
A type of fuel such as hydrogen or magnesium that do not contain carbon
Organic
A type of fuel that contains carbon
Self-heating
Also known as spontaneous heating, is a form of chemical he energy that occurs when a material increases in temperature about the addition of external heat
Combustion
And exothermic chemical reaction that is a self sustaining process of rapid oxidation of a fuel, that produces heat and light
Matter
Anything that occupies space and has mass
Passive agents
Are materials absorb heat but do not participate actively in the combustion reaction
Oxidizers
Are not combustible but like oxygen they will support combustion
British thermal unit
Btu
29 CFR 1910.134
CFR: an atmosphere having less than 19.5% oxygen in the air as being oxygen deficient and presenting a hazard to persons not wearing respiratory protection to provide a supply of fresh air
Electrical heat energy
Can generate temperatures high enough to ignite any combustible materials near the heated area
Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Colorless, odorless, heavier than air gas that neither supports combustion nor burns. Is used and portable fire extinguishers as in extinguishing agent to extinguish class B or C fires by smothering or displacing the oxygen
Rollover
Condition in which the unburned combustible gases released in a confined space during the incipient or early steady-state stage accumulate at the ceiling level...
Solubility
Degree to which a solid, liquid, or gas dissolves in a solvent (usually water)
Emergency response guidebook
ERG
Incipient stage
First stage of the burning process and a confined space in which the substance being oxidized is producing some heat, but that he has not spread to other substances nearby. During this phase, the oxygen content of the air has not been significantly reduced
Oxygen, fuel, heat, and a self sustained chemical chain reaction
Four elements needed for a flaming combustion
Gas, Solid, or Liquid
Fuel can be found in what states of matter
Mechanical heat
Generated by friction or compression
Hydrogen cyanide
HCN
Heat release rate
HRR
Conduction, convection, and radiation
Heat can be transferred from one body to another by three mechanisms
Heat
Heat or temperature: Is a form of energy, and energy exists in two states (potential and kinetic)
Temperature
Heat or temperature: Is a measurement of kinetic energy
Heat
Heat or temperature: Is the kinetic energy associated with the movement of the atoms and molecules that comprise matter.
Work
Increasing the temperature of the substance
Backdraft
Instantaneous explosion or rapid burning of superheated gases that occurs when oxygen is introduced into an oxygen-depleted confined space.
Class D
Involve combustible metals such as aluminum, magnesium, potassium, sodium, titanium, and zirconium
Class C
Involve energized electrical equipment
1 Newton over a distance of 1 meter
Joule is equal to
Material safety data sheet
MSDS
Miscible
Materials that are capable of being mixed
Flash point
Minimum temperature at which a liquid gives off enough vapors to form an ignitable mixture with air near the liquids surface
Fire tetrahedron
Model of the four elements/conditions required to have a fire. The four sides of the tetrahedron represent fuel, heat, oxygen, and chemical chain reaction
Piloted
Most common ignition
1001
NFPA: Standard for firefighter professional qualifications
Fully developed stage
Stage of burning process were energy release is at maximum rate and is limited only by availability of fuel and oxygen
Joules
The Measure for heat is
Upper flammable Limit
UFL
Specific gravity
Weight of a substance compared to the weight of an equal volume of water at a given temperature. A specific gravity less than 1 indicates a substance lighter than water; a specific gravity greater than 1 indicates a substance heavier than water
Heat of combustion
What is expressed in kilojoules/gram (kJ/g)
Piloted ignition
Which ignition: Occurs when a mixture of fuel and oxygen and counter and external heat source was sufficient heat energy to start the combustion reaction
Autoignition
Which ignition: Occurs without any external Flamer spark to ignite the fuel gases or vapors
The fire tetrahedron
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Thermal layering (of gases)
Outcome of combustion and in a confined space and which gases tend to form into layers, according to temperature, with the hottest gasses found at the ceiling in the coolest gases at the floor
Conduction
Physical flow or transfer of heat energy from one body to another through direct contact or an intervening medium from the point where the key is produced to another location or from a region of high temperature to a region of low temperature
Class A
The primary mechanism of extinguishing is cooling to reduce the temperature the fuel to slow or stop the release of pyrolysis products
Specific gravity
The ratio of the mass of a given volume of a liquid compared with the mass (weight) of an equal volume of water at the same temperature
Radiation
The transmission or transfer of heat energy from one body to another body at a lower temperature through intervening space by electromagnetic waves such as infrared thermal waves, radio waves, or x-Rays
Class K
These fires require and extinguishing agent specifically formulated for the materials involved.
Oxygen, fuel, and heat
Three components needed for a fire to occur
Convection
Transfer of heat by the movement of heated fluids or gases, usually in an upward direction
Vaporization
Transformation of a liquid to vapor or gaseous state
True
True or False: there is a difference between heat and temperature
Piloted ignition and autoignition
Two forms of ignition