Investigating the influence of outdoor temperature variations on fire-induced smoke behavior in an atrium-type underground metro station using hybrid ventilation systems

Desheng Xu, Yanfeng Li, Tianmei Du, Hua Zhong, Youbo Huang, Lei Li, Duanmu Xiangling

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Underground metro systems are expanding rapidly worldwide, necessitating research on energy-efficient ventilation systems, fire safety, and smoke control. This study investigates the optimisation of hybrid mechanical-natural ventilation for smoke control in complex metro stations. Full-scale winter/summer experiments and numerical simulations examined a double-deck atrium-type station. Results demonstrate the atrium fires are more significantly impacted by outdoor temperature variations versus concourse/platform fires, with a 70 K versus 30 K temperature rise above the fire respectively. The heat of the gathered high-temperature smoke inside the atrium can reach up to 900 K under a 5 MW train fire energy release. The dimensionless Archimedes number (Ar) defines the ratio of thermal buoyancy to gravitational forces. Cold exterior winter air (Ar<1) entering via the atrium ceiling openings restricted vertical smoke diffusion, enabling enhanced lateral propagation. With rising outdoor temperatures from −20 °C to 10 °C (Ar<1), the natural smoke extraction efficiency increased from 0 to 18 %, coupled with vertical airflow velocities accelerating from −3.5 m/s to 1.5 m/s. When outdoor temperatures were between 10 °C and 40 °C (Ar>1), airflow velocity only changed slightly. Empirical models predict internal temperature profiles as a function of external meteorology. The findings provide crucial engineering insights into integrating weather data and adaptable ventilation protocols for scenario-based smoke prevention/mitigation. Further work should examine seasonal variations beyond the tested -20‒40 °C range. Overall, considering outdoor climate effects allows 30 % optimisation of hybrid ventilation systems for fire safety in underground metro stations. This study promotes technological advances in energy-efficient transport infrastructure resilience.
Original languageEnglish
Article number129570
Pages (from-to)129570
JournalEnergy
Volume287
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Nov 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023

Keywords

  • Fire energy release
  • Atrium-type underground metro station
  • Hybrid ventilation systems
  • Smoke extraction efficiency
  • Fire safety

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