Exhaust flow calibration for a large-scale calorimetry system using tracer gas dilution

Fire Mater. 2024 Mar;48(2):10.1002/fam.3183. doi: 10.1002/fam.3183.

Abstract

Exhaust flow measurements are a significant source of uncertainty for measurements of heat release rate in large-scale fire experiments. Irregular flow distributions are often present in the exhaust ducts making it difficult to measure flow accurately. Tracer gas dilution (TGD), a measurement method for volume flow, is not sensitive to flow distribution and has been applied to calibrate flow measurement devices at the exhaust ducts of a large-scale open calorimetry system. The in-line calibration reduced the bias in the exhaust flow measurement by as much as 6% improving the overall measurement accuracy of the heat release rate. Experimental results provide evidence that the flow calibration is an improvement over the accepted practice of developing a flow correction from the comparison of oxygen consumption calorimetry with the heat output from a gas burner. The flow calibration is valid for a wide range of flow conditions and decouples the oxygen consumption calorimetry measurement from any error in determining the heat release rate from the gas burner.

Keywords: calorimetry; exhaust flow monitoring; flow calibration; flow mixing; heat release rate; tracer gas dilution.