DocumentCode
304133
Title
Fire causes and ignition
Author
Lilley, David G.
Author_Institution
Lilley & Associates, Stillwater, OK, USA
Volume
1
fYear
1996
fDate
11-16 Aug 1996
Firstpage
85
Abstract
Accidental and deliberate fires all have an “origin” and a “cause”, the former being the location where a fire began (ignited) and the latter being the reason for the co-existence of fuel, oxygen and heat in proportions such as to cause ignition. Fire and arson investigators examine and interpret post-fire evidence so as to ascertain the origin and cause of fires. Useful information is given relating to this conclusion, including fuel properties, heat transfer, heat source groups, chemical chain reaction, spontaneous ignition, technical information, and fire-causing heat sources
Keywords
chemical reactions; fires; fuel; heat transfer; chemical chain reaction; fire causes; fire ignition; fire-causing heat sources; fuel properties; heat; heat source groups; heat transfer; oxygen; post-fire evidence; spontaneous ignition; technical information; Containers; Fires; Fuels; Heat transfer; Ignition; Liquids; Petroleum; Shape; Solids; Temperature;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, 1996. IECEC 96., Proceedings of the 31st Intersociety
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
ISSN
1089-3547
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3547-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IECEC.1996.552850
Filename
552850
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