A numerical study of atrium fires using deterministic models

Abstract The smoke filling process for the three types of atrium space containing a fire source are simulated using the two types of deterministic fire model; zone model and field model. The zone model used in this simulation is CFAST (Version 3.1) developed at the Building and Fire Research Laboratories, NIST in the USA. The field model is a self-developed CFD model based on full consideration of the compressibility and k–e modeling for the turbulence. This article is focused on finding out the smoke movement and temperature distribution in atrium spaces. A computational procedure for predicting velocity and temperature distribution in fire-induced flow is based on the solution of three-dimensional Navier–Stokes conservation equations for mass, momentum, energy, species etc. using a finite volume method and non-staggered grid system. Since air is entrained from the bottom of the plume, total mass flow in the plume continuously increases. Also, the ceiling jet continuously decreases in temperature, smoke concentration and velocity; and increase in thickness with increasing radius. The fire models, i.e. zone models and field models, predicted similar results for the smoke layer temperature and the smoke layer interface heights. This is important in fire safety, and it can be considered that the required safe egress time in three types of atrium used, in this paper is about 5 min.