COMPARISON OF IGNITION AND COMBUSTION CHARACTERISTICS OF PRESSURE TREATED WOOD AND TREX EXPOSED TO THERMALLY CHARACTERIZED GLOWING FIREBRAND PILES
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In recent decades, the intensity of wildfires worldwide has escalated, leading to a rise in the destruction of structures and loss of lives within the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI). Firebrands are small fragments of ignited vegetation or structural material that are carried by the plume of a wildfire, traveling in advance of the main fire front. Firebrand exposure has been recognized as the primary mechanism for the propagation of wildfires as well as a source of ignition of structural elements. However, this complex ignition process of structural elements in the WUI has yet to be fully understood. The ignition and combustion characteristics of a thermoplastic-wood composite (Trex) and Pressure Treated Wood (PTW), two frequently used WUI decking materials, when exposed to glowing firebrand piles were studied using a bench scale wind tunnel. An inert insulation material, ii Kaowool PM, was also used as a deposition substrate to quantify the heat feedback and combustion characteristics of solely the firebrand pile. Firebrand pile densities of 0.16 g cm-2 and 0.06 g cm-2 were deposited on each substrate in rectangular 10 cm x 5 cm orientations and exposed to air flow velocities of 0.9 m s-1, 1.4 m s-1, 2.4 m s-1, and 2.7 m s-1. Infrared camera measurements were used to determine the back surface temperatures of Kaowool PM tests. Using DSLR cameras, surface ignitions of the decking material in front of the firebrand pile (preleading zone ignition events), ignitions on top of the firebrand pile (pile ignition events), and surface ignitions of the decking material behind the firebrand pile (downstream ignition events) were visually quantified via their probability of ignition, time to ignition, and burn duration at each testing condition. A gas analyzer was used to compare combustion characteristics of Trex, PTW, and Kaowool PM tests through heat release rate (HRR) and modified combustion efficiency (MCE). Peak back surface temperatures of the firebrand pile were found to increase with increased air flow up to 2.4 m s-1, and then plateau. The same trend was observed for the ignition probabilities of preleading zone and pile ignition events. The probability of downstream ignition events increased with increasing air flow velocity. Peak HRR increased with increasing air flow velocity. Trex exhibited significantly less smoldering combustion than PTW yet was prone to more intense flaming combustion. When the rectangular 5 cm x 10 cm firebrand pile (10 cm edge facing the airflow), of which the majority of tests were conducted on, was rotated 90 degrees so that the 5 cm edge faced the airflow, the result was a significant decrease in the probability of ignition for both Trex and PTW, along with notable reductions in their HRR and MCE profiles.