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Basics of Fire and Fire Science

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Title: Basics of Fire and Fire Science


1
Basics of Fire and Fire Science
  • Provides the technical foundation and logic for
    fire protection, the general concepts of systems
    and physical science relating to fire protection.
    Forward page 2.

2
U.S. Fire Loss Trends
  • Table 1.1 pg 4
  • Figures 1.1 to 1.4 pgs 4 5
  • Fire around the world
  • Fig 1.6 pg 7

3
Fire Patterns by Property Class
  • Homes and garages
  • American community
  • Industrial environment
  • Other structures
  • Mobile environment
  • Outdoor
  • Other
  • Figs 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12

4
Deadliest Fires and Conflagrations
  • Table 1.4 and 1.5 pg 11
  • Conflagrations table 1.8 pg 13
  • Four groups noted

5
Fire Prevention
  • Every hostile fire requires an initial heat
    source, an initial fuel source, and something to
    bring them together.
  • Prevention activities can mitigate all three
    requirements
  • Product redesign
  • Fuel source change
  • Human behavior change

6
Leading Causes of Fire
  • Homes and garages table 1.10 pg 15
  • American community table 1.1 pg 16
  • Industrial environment table 1.12

7
Fire Protection
  • Recognizing that prevention will never be 100
    percent successful, it is necessary to plan and
    design so as to mitigate damages when fire
    occurs.
  • Statement on page 17

8
Materials Products, and Environments
  • If prevention fails the first opportunity to
    reduce fire damage comes in design of materials,
    products and environments so as to slow the
    growth and spread of fire.
  • This strategy can be pursued in 7 basic
    approaches

9
Seven Basic Approaches
  • Restrict materials used in contents and
    furnishings
  • Add fire retardant to materials
  • Use fire resistant barriers
  • Restrict total fuel load
  • Restrict linings of rooms to prevent rapid fire
    spread
  • Restrict materials in concealed spaces
  • Require safe handling of potential fuels

10
Detection and Alarm
  • Home smoke alarms
  • 5 in 1972
  • 94 in 1997
  • Cut risk by nearly half of dying in fire
  • All structure (property classes) should be
    detected and alarmed

11
Detection and Alarm
  • Major life loss fires frequently cite problems
    detection or alarm as significant contributing
    factors.
  • Absense of needed system
  • Misapplication
  • Lack of maintenance
  • Improprt response by occupant

12
Detection and Alarm
  • In too many property classes the majority of
    fires occur in facilities with no detectors. This
    is true for the majority of fires in public
    assembly properties, for two thirds of store and
    office property, and two thirds of industrial
    property.

13
Suppression
  • Automatic sprinkler are highly effective. Chances
    of dying and property loss are cut by one half to
    two thirds compared to reported fires where
    sprinklers are not present.
  • There has never been a multi-fatality in a
    properly sprinkled building.

14
Unsatisfactory Results With Sprinklers
  • Partial, antiquated, poorly maintained, or
    inapproperate system
  • Explosion or flash over power system
  • Fires very close to people who are killed prior
    to system reaction

15
Confining Fires
  • The design of building features to contain fires
    and their effects effectively is one of the most
    technically complex aspects of fire protection
    and is difficult to evaluate
  • Options for confining fires pg 20 21
  • Large losses of life and property are virtually
    unknown in building that comply with modern codes.

16
Evacuation of Occupants
  • Most fire protection strategies are designed to
    slow or divert the movement of smoke and fire,
    not to stop it, so key questions are whether,
    where, and how to move occupants.
  • Building design principles pg 21
  • Principles of escape behavior are essential pg 21
  • Important statement pg 22

17
Systems Approaches for Property Classes
  • In applying general principles of fire protection
    it is clear that property class have different or
    special considerations that must be understood
  • What are some differences?
  • Homes and garages
  • American community
  • Industry
  • Mobile environment

18
A Century of Accomplishments
  • NFPA has been a force for fire protection and
    life safety for the past 100 years. In that time
    most of NFPAs influence has come through its
    standards and codes.
  • NFPA catalog lists hundreds of items
  • NFPAs future pg 29

19
Organizing for Fire Protection
  • Fire department organization is a critically
    important element of fire protection. The
    effectiveness of the organization and management
    of U.S. FDs determines whether the more than 20
    Billion in annual expenditures for local fire
    protection is spent well or not.
  • Table 1.17 Fig 1.15 1.16pg 29,30

20
Organizing Before The Fire
  • Preparing for fire begins with Prevention
    activities.
  • The FD is closest to the public served therefore
    it is and should be a education source.

21
Organizing at Fires
  • Effective suppression requires clear policies and
    objectives, with tactics that are logical.
  • It all boils down to GPM applied to a give fire
    BUT other tactical operations are critical.
  • All the necessary operations take proper staffing
    for safe and effective outcomes.

22
Protecting Firefighters
  • Deaths are in decline BUT too many fatalities
    occur from heart attacks and road accidents.
  • Many of these are preventable
  • How?

23
Fire Data Collection and Databases
  • How do we know what we know about fire? Where do
    the statistics come from?
  • Data, its proper collection and analysis are
    critical to well informed decisions.
  • NFIRS is a major source

24
NFIRS
  • Provides a standard format for collecting fire
    related data.
  • It has been in wide use since 1980
  • New and improved version 5.0 was promulgated in
    1999.
  • About a third to a half of the states have
    accepted version 5.0 during 2000.

25
NFIRS
  • One of the long term goals of NFIRS is to promote
    local reporting. Due to fiscal, technical, or
    personnel issues some states have had years in
    which no data was submitted.
  • It is hard to precisely define which states are
    or are not participating

26
NFIRS
  • A three tiered system
  • Local level
  • State level
  • Federal level
  • National Fire Information Council
  • Works with USFA to manage NFIRS and promote fire
    incident reporting

27
NIFRS Definitions
  • Fire any instance of destructive and
    uncontrolled burning, including explosions.
  • Structures not just buildings
  • Casualties FFs and civilians
  • Equipment involved equipment providing the heat
    that starts the fire
  • Intentional replaces incendiary and suspicious

28
NFIRS 5.0
  • Data elements
  • Reportable, codeable, quantifiable
  • Collectable
  • Useable
  • Different modules
  • See pg 42

29
Computers and NFIRS
  • Ease entry and retrieval
  • Quality control issues (software helps insure
    proper data entry)
  • Data retrieval and analysis
  • Data should be easy to retrieve
  • Analysis is of two kinds
  • Routine, periodic
  • Special reports usually very specific

30
Getting The Big Picture On Fires
  • NFIRS
  • NFPAs annual report
  • survey of selected FDs used to develop national
    estimates (not very detailed)
  • Other sources
  • Fire Incident Data Organization (news, word of
    mouth)
  • Uniform criminal reporting ATF (arson)
  • Consumer product safety, Nat. Safety C

31
Using Data and Statistics
  • Potential data users
  • Table 3.1 pg 54
  • Ten major findings on the nature of the fire
    problem from analysis of the past decade
  • Table 3.2 pg 55 56

32
Using Data and Statistics
  • Basic tools for NFIRS analysis
  • Coding Manual
  • Reference Guide
  • Design Documentation Manual
  • Conversion tables
  • Record layouts, edit checks, dictionary

33
Using Data and Statistics
  • Data source issues
  • NIFRS is Not a complete census
  • NIFRS is not complete or a random sample
  • Reporting policies and practices
  • Important for completeness and accuracy
  • Each state is different (not good)

34
Approaches to Data Analysis
  • Top-Down
  • Summarizes the big picture and subdivides into
    major parts
  • Provide the broad picture
  • Topic-Driven
  • Analysis in specific issues in a particular type
    of fire problem

35
Analysis by Cause and Property
  • The dimensions most frequently chosen for
    top-down and topic-driven analysis are fire cause
    and property type.
  • Fire incident data code contains five fire cause
    related elements
  • 1.heat source, 2. equipment involved in ignition,
    3. form of material ignited, 4. type of material
    ignited, 5. ignition factor

36
The Five Dimensions
  • Six major patterns are extracted from the
    information gathered
  • Intentional vs. unintentional
  • Equipment
  • Behavior
  • Heat source
  • Item ignition
  • Cause

37
Using Data in Program and Strategy Analysis
  • Program and strategy analysis is the most
    decision relevant use of data because it tries to
    project the future and the ways in which the
    future will be different if a particular program
    is or is not adopted.
  • much of the future will be different due to
    change

38
Using Data in Programand Strategy Analysis
  • The future will most likely be a different
    mixture of elements already present that must be
    justified with changing conditions and new
    elements.
  • Analysis of the projected impact of a strategy or
    program involves 5 steps

39
Using Data in Programand Strategy Analysis
  • 1. identify the part of the fire problem that the
    strategy can affect and measure the size of that
    problem
  • 2. estimate the likely percentage reduction if
    specific strategies or programs are put in place
  • 3. estimate how much of the population will adopt
    or be affected by the strategy or program and how
    quickly

40
Using Data in Programand Strategy Analysis
  • 4. estimate how often the strategy or program
    will be defeated in practice
  • 5. combine the measures of fire problem size from
    step 1 and percentages from steps 2 to 4 to
    produce estimates of the net percentage reduction
    in the fire problem and of the new size of the
    fire problem
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