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Fire fighting



 
 
Firefighting is the act of extinguishing destructive fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
s. A firefighter
Firefighter

Firefighters are rescuers extensively trained primarily to put out hazardous fires that threaten civilian populations and property, to rescue people from car accidents, collapsed and burning buildings and other such situations....
 fights these fires to prevent destruction of life, property and the environment. Firefighting is a highly technical profession which requires years of training and education in order to become proficient.

fighters' goals are to save life, property and the environment.






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Dod Mobile Aircraft Firefighting Training Device
Firefighting is the act of extinguishing destructive fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
s. A firefighter
Firefighter

Firefighters are rescuers extensively trained primarily to put out hazardous fires that threaten civilian populations and property, to rescue people from car accidents, collapsed and burning buildings and other such situations....
 fights these fires to prevent destruction of life, property and the environment. Firefighting is a highly technical profession which requires years of training and education in order to become proficient.

Firefighters' duties

Firefighters' goals are to save life, property and the environment. A fire can rapidly spread and endanger many lives; however, with modern firefighting techniques, catastrophe is usually, but not always, avoided. To prevent fires from starting a firefighter's duties include public education and conducting fire inspections.

Because firefighters are often the first responders to people in critical conditions, firefighters provide many other valuable services to the community they serve, such as:

  • Emergency medical services, as emergency medical technician
    Emergency medical technician

    Emergency medical technician is a term used in various countries to denote a healthcare provider trained to provide pre-hospital emergency medical services....
    s or as licensed paramedic
    Paramedic

    A paramedic is a medical professional, usually a member of the emergency medical services, who primarily provides pre-hospital advanced Medical emergency and Physical trauma care....
    s.
  • Hazardous materials mitigation (HAZMAT)
  • Heavy rescue
  • Search and rescue
  • Community disaster support


In addition, firefighters also service in specialized fields, such as:

  • Aircraft/airport rescue
    Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting

    Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting is a special category of firefighting that involves the response, hazard mitigation, evacuation and possible rescue of passengers and crew of an aircraft involved in an airport ground emergency....
  • Wildland fire suppression
  • Shipboard and military fire and rescue
  • Tactical paramedic support ("SWAT medics")


In the US, firefighters also serve the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as Urban Search And Rescue (USAR) team members.

Hazards caused by fire


Firefighters1
Firefighters2
The primary risk to people in a fire is smoke inhalation (breathing in smoke; most of those killed in fires die from this, not from burns). The risks of smoke include:
  • suffocation due to the fire consuming or displacing all the oxygen
    Oxygen

    Oxygen no O2 produced; 2) O2 produced, but absorbed in oceans & seabed rock; 3) O2 starts to gas out of the oceans, but is absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer; 4-5) O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates]]...
     from the air
    AIR

    Air is the part of Earth's atmosphere that humans breath and as such Air .Air may also refer to:...
    ;
  • poisonous gases produced by the fire;
  • aspirating heated smoke that can burn the inside of the lung
    Lung

    The lung is the essential respiration organ in air-breathing animals, including most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart....
    s.


As an example, plastic
Plastic

Plastic is the general common term for a wide range of synthetic or semisynthetic organic chemistry solid materials suitable for the manufacture of industrial products....
s inside a car can generate 200,000 m3 of smoke at a rate of 20-30 m3/sec.. Firefighters carry self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) (an open-circuit positive pressure compressed air system) to prevent smoke inhalation. These are not oxygen tanks. They carry compressed air.

Obvious risks stem from the effects of heat. Even without contact with the flames (conduction
Heat conduction

Heat conduction or thermal conduction is the spontaneous heat transfer through matter, from a region of higher temperature to a region of lower temperature, and acts to equalize temperature differences....
), there are a number of comparably serious risks: burns
Burn (injury)

A burn is a type of injury that may be caused by heat, Temperature, electricity, chemicals, light, radiation, or friction. Burns can be highly variable in terms of the tissue affected, the severity, and resultant complications....
 from radiated heat, contact with a hot object, hot gases (e.g., air), steam and hot and/or toxic smoke
Smoke

File:Bling-Bling Skywriting David Shankbone.jpgSmoke is the collection of airborne solid and liquid particulates and gases emitted when a material undergoes combustion or pyrolysis, together with the quantity of air that is entrainment or otherwise mixed into the mass....
. Firefighter
Firefighter

Firefighters are rescuers extensively trained primarily to put out hazardous fires that threaten civilian populations and property, to rescue people from car accidents, collapsed and burning buildings and other such situations....
s are equipped with personal protective equipment (PPE) that includes fire-resistant clothing (nomex
Nomex

Nomex is a registered trademark for flame resistant meta-aramid material developed in the early 1960s by DuPont and first marketed in 1967.It can be considered an aromaticity nylon, the meta- variant of the para--aramid Kevlar....
 or polybenzimidazole fiber
Polybenzimidazole fiber

Polybenzimidazole or PBI fiber is a synthetic fiber with an extremely high melting point that also does not readily ignite, because of its exceptional thermal and chemical stability....
 (PBI)) and helmets that limit the transmission of heat towards the body.

The heat can make pressurised gas cylinders and tanks explode
Explosion

An explosion is a sudden increase in volume and release of energy in an extreme manner, usually with the generation of high temperatures and the release of gases....
, producing what is called a BLEVE
BLEVE

BLEVE , is an acronym for "boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion". This is a type of explosion that can occur when a vessel containing a pressure liquid is ruptured....
 (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion). Some chemical products such as ammonium nitrate
Ammonium nitrate

The chemical compound ammonium nitrate, the nitrate of ammonia with the chemical formula NitrogenHydrogen4NitrogenOxygen3, is a white powder at room temperature and standard pressure....
 fertilizer
Fertilizer

Fertilizers are chemical compounds given to plants to promote growth; they are usually applied either through the soil, for uptake by plant roots, or by foliar feeding, for uptake through leaves....
s can also explode. Explosions can cause physical trauma
Physical trauma

Physical trauma refers to a body injury. A trauma patient is someone who has suffered serious and life-threatening physical injury with the potential for secondary complications such as Shock , respiratory failure and death....
 or potentially serious blast
Blast

A blast is an explosion. Blast can also refer to:Entertainment:* BBC Blast, a programme, website and tour for 13 - 19 year olds getting creative...
 or shrapnel
Shrapnel

Shrapnel shells were anti-personnel artillery munitions which carried a large number of individual bullets to the target and then ejected them forwards, relying almost entirely on the shell's velocity for their lethality....
 injuries.

Heat causes human flesh to burn as fuel causing severe medical problems. Depending upon the heat of the fire, burns can occur in a fraction of a second. A first degree burn (on the skin surface) is extremely painful. A second degree burn is a burn into the skin, and can cause shock, infections, and dehydration and if left untreated often results in death. Second degree burns compromise nerve tissue and are not painful. Third degree burns leave muscles and internal organs exposed from completely destroyed skin. If the person survives the shock and exposure to germs, medical treatment is extremely difficult.

Additional risks of firefighting encompass the following:
  • vision can be obscured by the smoke: a person inside the building may not be able to see, can fall, or become disoriented and lost; becoming trapped and killed by the smoke or fire.
  • the building can collapse on its occupants.


Reconnaissance and reading the fire


The first step of the operations is a reconnaissance to search for the origin of the fire (which may not be obvious for an indoor fire, especially when there are no witnesses), and spot the specific risks and the possible casualties. Any fire occurring outside may not require reconnaissance; on the other hand, a fire in a cellar or an underground car park with only a few centimeters of visibility may require a long reconnaissance to spot the seat of the fire.

The "reading" of the fire is the analysis by the firefighters of the forewarnings of a thermal accident (flashover
Flashover

A flashover is the near simultaneous ignition of all combustible material in an enclosed area when the majority of surfaces in a space are heated to the temperature at which the flammable gases that are being produced from the combustible materials in the space are hot enough to ignite....
, backdraft
Backdraft

A backdraft is a situation which can occur when a fire is starved of oxygen; consequently combustion ceases but the fuel gases and smoke remain at high temperature....
, smoke explosion), which is performed during the reconnaissance and the fire suppression maneuvers. The main signs are:
  • hot zones, which can be detected with a gloved hand, especially by touching a door before opening it;
  • the presence of soot on the windows, which usually means that combustion is incomplete and thus there is a lack of air
  • smoke goes in and out from the door frame, as if the fire breathes, which usually means a lack of air to support combustion;
  • spraying water on the ceiling with a short pulse of a diffused spray (e.g. cone
    Cone (geometry)

    A cone is a dimension geometric shape that tapers smoothly from a flat, round base to a point called the apex or vertex. More precisely, it is the solid figure bounded by a plane base and the surface formed by the locus of all straight line segments joining the apex to the perimeter of the base....
     with an opening angle of 60°) to test the heat of the smoke;
    • when the temperature is moderate, the water falls down in drops with a sound of rain;
    • when the temperature is high, it vaporizes with a hiss.


Ideally, part of reconnaissance is to consult an existing Preplan for the building. This would provide knowledge of existing structures, fire fighter hazards, and can include strategies and tactics.

Science of extinguishment

Fire Elements

There are four elements needed to start and sustain a fire and/or flame. These elements are classified in the “Fire Tetrahedron”. These four elements of the “Fire Tetrahedron” are:

A. Reducing Agent (Fuel)

B. Heat

C. Self-sustained chemical Reaction

D. Oxidizing Agent (Oxygen)

A. The reducing agent, or fuel, is the substance or material that is being oxidized or burned in the combustion process. The most common fuels contain carbon along with combinations of hydrogen and oxygen.

B. Heat is the energy component of the fire tetrahedron. When heat comes into contact with a fuel, it provides the energy necessary for ignition, causes the continuous production and ignition of fuel vapors or gases so that the combustion reaction can continue, and causes the vaporization of solid and liquid fuels.

C. The self-sustained chemical reaction is a complex reaction that requires a fuel, an oxidizer, and heat energy to come together in a very specific way. A chain reaction is a series of reaction that occur n sequence with the results of each individual reaction being added to the rest. This happens in the science of fire, but is self-sustaining in that it continues without interruption.

D. An oxidizing agent is a material or substance that when the proper conditions exist will release gases, including oxygen. This is crucial to the sustainment of a flame or fire.

Extinguishment

A fire can be extinguished or put out by taking away any of the four components of the “Fire Tetrahedron”. This section will discuss how the most widely used method of extinguishment of fire is accomplished.

Application of Water

This first way water extinguishes a fire is by cooling. This cooling process removes the heat from the fire. This is possible through water’s ability to absorb massive amounts of heat by converting to steam. Without the heat the fuel no longer has the conditions required to produce oxygen to sustain the fire.

The second way water extinguishes a fire is by smothering the fire. When water is heated to its boiling point it converts to a gas called water vapor or steam. When this conversion takes place is dilutes the oxygen in the air. This lowers the amount of oxygen in the air below what a flame requires to burn. This can be done with water by adding Foam.

Another way to extinguish a fire is fuel removal. This can be accomplished by stopping the flow of liquid or gaseous fuel or by removing solid fuel in the path of a fire. In addition, allowing the fire to burn until all the fuel is consumed. At that point, the fire will self extinguish.

The fourth and final way of extinguishment is chemical flame inhibition. This can be accomplished through some dry chemical and halogenated agents. These agents interrupt the combustion reaction and stop flaming. This method is effective on gas and liquid fuels because they must flame to burn.

Use of water


Often, the main way to extinguish a fire is to spray with water. The water has two roles:
  • in contact with the fire, it vaporizes
    Vaporization

    Vaporization of an element or compound is a phase transition from the liquid phase to gas phase. There are two types of vaporization: evaporation and boiling....
    , and this vapour displaces the oxygen (the volume of water vapour is 1,700 times greater than liquid water); leaving the fire with not enough combustive agent to continue, and it dies out.
  • the vaporization of water absorbs the heat; it cools the smoke
    Smoke

    File:Bling-Bling Skywriting David Shankbone.jpgSmoke is the collection of airborne solid and liquid particulates and gases emitted when a material undergoes combustion or pyrolysis, together with the quantity of air that is entrainment or otherwise mixed into the mass....
    , air, walls, objects in the room, etc., that could act as further fuel, and thus prevents one of the means that fires grow, which is by "jumping" to nearby heat/fuel sources to start new fires, which then combine.
The extinction is thus a combination of "asphyxia
Asphyxia

Asphyxia is a condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the body that arises from being unable to breathe normally. An example of asphyxia is choking....
" and cooling. The flame itself is suppressed by asphyxia, but the cooling is the most important element to master a fire in a closed area.

Water may be accessed by pressurized fire hydrant
Fire hydrant

A fire hydrant , is an active fire protection measure, and a source of water provided in most urban, suburban and rural areas with municipal water service to enable firefighters to tap into the municipal water supply to assist in extinguishing a fire....
, pumped from water sources such as lakes or rivers, delivered by tanker truck, or dropped from aircraft tankers in fighting forest fires
Wildfire

A wildfire is any uncontrolled, non-structure fire that occurs in the wilderness, wildland, or The Bush. Synonyms such as wildland fire, forest fire, brush fire, vegetation fire, grass fire, Peat#Fires, bushfire , and hill fire are commonly used....
.

Open air fire

For fires in the open, the seat of the fire is sprayed with a straight spray: the cooling effect immediately follows the "asphyxia" by vapor, and reduces the amount of water required. A straight spray is used so the water arrives massively to the seat without being vaporized before. A strong spray may also have a mechanical effect: it can disperse the combustible product and thus prevent the fire from starting again.

The fire is always fed with air, but the risk to people is limited as they can move away, except in the case of wildfire
Wildfire

A wildfire is any uncontrolled, non-structure fire that occurs in the wilderness, wildland, or The Bush. Synonyms such as wildland fire, forest fire, brush fire, vegetation fire, grass fire, Peat#Fires, bushfire , and hill fire are commonly used....
s or bushfire
Bushfire

A bushfire is a fire that occurs in The Bush . In south east Australia, bushfires tend to be most common and most severe during summer and autumn, in drought years, and particularly severe in El Ni?o years....
s where they can be surrounded by the flames. But there might be a big risk of expansion.

Spray is aimed at a surface, or object: for this reason, the strategy is sometimes called two-dimension
Dimension

In mathematics, the dimension of a space is roughly defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify every point within it. For example: a point on the unit circle in the plane can be specified by two Cartesian coordinates but one can make do with a single coordinate , so the circle is 1-dimensional even though it exists in...
al attack or 2D attack.

It might be necessary to protect specific items (house, gas tank) against infrared radiation, and thus to use a diffused spray between the fire and the object.

Breathing apparatus is often required as there is still the risk of breathing in smoke or poisonous gases.

Closed volume fire

Until the 1970s, fires were usually attacked while they declined, so the same strategy that was used for open air fires was effective. In recent times, fires are now attacked in their development phase as:
  • firefighters arrive sooner;
  • thermal insulation
    Thermal insulation

    The term thermal insulation can refer to materials used to reduce the rate of heat transfer, or the methods and processes used to reduce heat transfer....
     of houses confines the heat;
  • modern materials, especially the polymer
    Polymer

    A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
    s, produce a lot more heat than traditional materials (wood
    Wood

    Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
    , plaster
    Plaster

    The term plaster can refer to plaster of Paris, lime plaster, or cement plaster. This article deals mainly with plaster of Paris.Plaster of Paris is a type of building material based on calcium sulfate Hydrate, nominally CaSO4?0.5H2O....
    , stone
    Rock (geology)

    In geology, rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock....
    , brick
    Brick

    A brick is a block of ceramic material used in masonry construction, usually laid using mortar ....
    s, etc.).
Additionally, in these conditions, there is a greater risk of backdraft
Backdraft

A backdraft is a situation which can occur when a fire is starved of oxygen; consequently combustion ceases but the fuel gases and smoke remain at high temperature....
 and of flashover
Flashover

A flashover is the near simultaneous ignition of all combustible material in an enclosed area when the majority of surfaces in a space are heated to the temperature at which the flammable gases that are being produced from the combustible materials in the space are hot enough to ignite....
.

Spraying of the seat of the fire directly can have unfortunate and dramatic consequences: the water pushes air in front of it, so the fire is supplied with extra oxygen before the water reaches it. This activation of the fire, and the mixing of the gases produced by the water flow, can create a flashover.

The most important issue is not the flames, but control of the fire, i.e. the cooling of the smoke that can spread and start distant fires, and that endangers the lives of people, including firefighters. The volume must be cooled before the seat is treated. This strategy originally of Swedish (Mats Rosander & Krister Giselsson) origin, was further adapted by London Fire Officer Paul Grimwood following a decade of operational use in London's busy west-end district between 1984-94 (www.firetactics.com) and termed three-dimension
Dimension

In mathematics, the dimension of a space is roughly defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify every point within it. For example: a point on the unit circle in the plane can be specified by two Cartesian coordinates but one can make do with a single coordinate , so the circle is 1-dimensional even though it exists in...
al attack, or 3D attack.

Use of a diffused spray was first proposed by Chief Lloyd Layman of Parkersburg, West Virginia
Parkersburg, West Virginia

Parkersburg, located at the confluence of the Ohio River and Little Kanawha River Rivers, is the third largest city in the West Virginia. It is the county seat of Wood County, West Virginia and the largest city in the Parkersburg-Marietta, Ohio-Vienna, West Virginia Parkersburg-Marietta-Vienna metropolitan area....
 Fire Department, at the Fire Department Instructor's Conference (FDIC) in 1950 held in Memphis, Tennessee
Memphis, Tennessee

Memphis is a city in the southwest corner of the U.S. state of Tennessee, and the county seat of Shelby County, Tennessee. Memphis rises above the Mississippi River on the 4th Chickasaw Bluff just south of the mouth of the Wolf River ....
, U.S.A.

Using Grimwood's modified '3D attack strategy' the ceiling is first sprayed with short pulses of a diffused spray:
  • it cools the smoke, thus the smoke is less likely to start a fire when it moves away;
  • the pressure of the gas drops when it cools (law of ideal gas
    Ideal gas

    The ideal gas model is a model of matter in which the molecules are treated as non-interacting point particles which are engaged in a random motion that obeys conservation of energy....
    es), thus it also reduces the mobility of the smoke and avoids a "backfire" of water vapour;
  • it creates an inert "water vapour sky" which prevents roll-over (rolls of flames on the ceiling created by the burning of hot gases).


Only short pulses of water must be sprayed, otherwise the spraying modifies the equilibrium, and the gases mix instead of remaining stratified: the hot gases (initially at the ceiling) move around the room and the temperature rises at the ground, which is dangerous for firefighters. An alternative is to cool all the atmosphere by spraying the whole atmosphere as if drawing letters in the air ("pencilling").

The modern methods for an urban fire dictate the use of a massive initial water flow, e.g. 500 L/min for each fire hose. The aim is to absorb as much heat as possible at the beginning to stop the expansion of the fire, and to reduce the smoke. When the flow is too small, the cooling is not sufficient, and the steam that is produced can burn firefighters (the drop of pressure is too small and the vapor is pushed back). Although it may seem paradoxical, the use of a strong flow with an efficient fire hose and an efficient strategy (diffused sprayed, small droplets) requires a smaller amount of water: once the temperature is lowered, only a limited amount of water is necessary to suppress the fire seat with a straight spray. For a living room of 50 m˛ (60 square yards), the required amount of water is estimated as 60 L (15 gallons).

French fire-fighters used an alternative method in the 1970s: they sprayed water on the hot walls to create a water vapour atmosphere and asphyxiate the fire. This method is no longer used because it was risky: the pressure created pushed the hot gases and vapour towards the firefighters, causing severe burns, and pushed the hot gases into other rooms where they could start a new fire.

Asphyxiating a fire


In some cases, the use of water is undesirable:
  • some chemical products react
    Chemical reaction

    A chemical reaction is a process that always results in the interconversion of chemical substances. The substance or substances initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants....
     with water and produce poisonous gases, or even burn in contact with water (e.g. sodium
    Sodium

    Sodium is an element which has the symbol Na , atomic number 11, atomic mass 23 amu , and a common oxidation number +1. Sodium is a soft, silvery white, highly reactive element and is a member of the alkali metals within "group 1" ....
    );
  • some products float on water, e.g. hydrocarbon
    Hydrocarbon

    In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon. With relation to chemical terminology, aromatic hydrocarbons or arenes, alkanes, alkenes and alkyne-based compounds composed entirely of carbon or hydrogen are referred to as "pure" hydrocarbons, whereas other hydrocarbons with bonded com...
     (gasoline
    Gasoline

    File:GasCan.jpgGasoline or petrol is a petroleum-derived liquid mixture, primarily used as fuel in internal combustion engines.It consists mostly of aliphatic hydrocarbons, enhanced with iso-octane or the aromatic hydrocarbons toluene and benzene to increase its octane rating....
    , oil
    Petroleum

    Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
    , alcohol
    Alcohol

    In chemistry, an alcohol is any organic compound in which a hydroxyl Functional group is bound to a carbon atom of an alkyl or substituted alkyl group....
    , etc.); a burning layer can then spread and extend;
  • in case of a pressurised gas tank, it is necessary to avoid heat shocks that may damage the tank: the resulting decompression may produce a BLEVE
    BLEVE

    BLEVE , is an acronym for "boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion". This is a type of explosion that can occur when a vessel containing a pressure liquid is ruptured....
    .


It is then necessary to asphyxiate the fire. This can be done in two ways:
  • some chemical products react with the fuel and stop the combustion;
  • a layer of water-based fire retardant foam
    Fire retardant foam

    Fire Retardant Foam, or fire suppression foam, is a foam used for fire extinguisher. Its role is to cool the fire and to coat the fuel, preventing its contact with oxygen, resulting in suppression of the combustion....
     is projected on the product by the fire hose, to keep the oxygen in air separated from the fuel.


Tactical ventilation or isolation of the fire


One of the main risks of a fire is the smoke
Smoke

File:Bling-Bling Skywriting David Shankbone.jpgSmoke is the collection of airborne solid and liquid particulates and gases emitted when a material undergoes combustion or pyrolysis, together with the quantity of air that is entrainment or otherwise mixed into the mass....
: it carries heat and poisonous gases, and obscures vision. In the case of a fire in a closed location (building), two different strategies may be used: isolation of the fire, or positive pressure ventilation.

Paul Grimwood introduced the concept of tactical ventilation in the 1980s to encourage a more well thought out approach to this aspect of firefighting. Following work with Warrington Fire Research Consultants (FRDG 6/94) his terminology and concepts were adopted officially by the UK fire service and are now referred to throughout revised Home Office training manuals (1996-97).

Paul Grimwood's original definition of his 1991 unified strategy stated that ....

'tactical ventilation is either the venting, or containment (isolation) actions by on-scene firefighters, used to take control from the outset of a fire's burning regime, in an effort to gain tactical advantage during interior structural firefighting operations'.

Positive pressure ventilation
Positive pressure ventilation

In emergency medicine positive pressure ventilation refers to the process of forcing air into the lungs of a patient, usually using a Bag valve mask or mechanical ventilator....
 (PPV
PPV

PPV may stand for:* Pay-per-view on cable or satellite television* Plum pox virus, a plant virus* Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine, a pneumococcal vaccine...
) consists of using a fan
Fan (mechanical)

A mechanical fan is an electricity powered device used to produce an airflow for the purpose of creature comfort , Ventilation , exhaust, or any other gaseous transport....
 to create excess pressure in a part of the building; this pressure will push the smoke and the heat away, and thus secure the rescue and fire fighting operations. It is necessary to have an exit for the smoke, to know the building very well to predict where the smoke will go, and to ensure that the doors remain open by wedging or propping them. The main risk of this method is that it may activate the fire, or even create a flashover
Flashover

A flashover is the near simultaneous ignition of all combustible material in an enclosed area when the majority of surfaces in a space are heated to the temperature at which the flammable gases that are being produced from the combustible materials in the space are hot enough to ignite....
, e.g. if the smoke and the heat accumulate in a dead end.

Categorizing fires

Fires are sometimes categorized as "one alarm","all hands", "two alarm", "three alarm" (or higher) fires. There is no standard definition for what this means quantifiably, though it always refers to the level response by the local authorities. In some cities, the numeric rating refers to the number of fire stations that have been summoned to the fire. In others, the number counts the number of "dispatches" for additional personnel and equipment.

Appendix: calculating the amount of water required to suppress a fire in a closed volume


In the case of a closed volume, it is easy to compute the amount of water needed. The oxygen
Oxygen

Oxygen no O2 produced; 2) O2 produced, but absorbed in oceans & seabed rock; 3) O2 starts to gas out of the oceans, but is absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer; 4-5) O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates]]...
 (O2) in air (21%) is necessary for combustion
Combustion

Combustion or burning is a complex sequence of exothermic chemical reactions between a fuel and an oxidant accompanied by the production of heat or both heat and light in the form of either a glow or flames, appearance of light flickering....
. Whatever the amount of fuel available (wood, paper, cloth), combustion will stop when the air becomes "thin", i.e. when it contains less than 15% oxygen. If additional air
AIR

Air is the part of Earth's atmosphere that humans breath and as such Air .Air may also refer to:...
 cannot enter, we can calculate:

  • The amount of water required to make the atmosphere inert, i.e. to prevent the pyrolysis
    Pyrolysis

    Pyrolysis is the chemical decomposition of a condensed substance by heating. The word is coined from the Greek language-derived morphemes pyro "fire" and lysys "decomposition"....
     gases to burn; this is the "volume computation";
  • The amount of water required to cool the smoke, the atmosphere; this is the "thermal computation".


These computations are only valid when considering a diffused spray which penetrates the entire volume; this is not possible in the case of a high ceiling: the spray is short and does not reach the upper layers of air. Consequently the computations are not valid for large volumes such as barns or warehouses: a warehouse of 1,000 m˛ (1,200 square yards) and 10 m high (33 ft) represents 10,000 m3. In practice, such large volumes are unlikely to be airtight anyway.

Volume computation


Fire needs air; if water vapour pushes all the air away, the fuel can no longer burn. But the replacement of all the air by water vapour is harmful for firefighters and other people still in the building: the water vapour can carry much more heat than air at the same temperature (one can be burnt by water vapour at 100 °C (212 °F) above a boiling saucepan, whereas it is possible to put an arm in an oven—without touching the metal!—at 270 °C (520 °F) without damage). This amount of water is thus an upper limit which should not actually be reached.

The optimal, and minimum, amount of water to use is the amount required to dilute the air to 15% oxygen: below this concentration, the fire cannot burn.

The amount used should be between the optimal value and the upper limit. Any additional water would just run on the floor and cause water damage without contributing to fire suppression.

Let:
  • Vr be the volume of the room,
  • Vv be the volume of vapour required,
  • Vw be the volume of liquid water to create the Vv volume of vapour,
then for an air at 500 °C (773 K, 932 °F, best case concerning the volume, probable case at the beginning of the operation), we have and for a temperature of 100 °C (373 K, 212 °F, worst case concerning the volume, probable case when the fire is suppressed and the temperature is lowered): For the maximum volume, we have: considering a temperature of 100 °C. To compute the optimal volume (dilution of oxygen from 21 to 15%), we have for a temperature of 500 °C. The table below show some results, for rooms with a height of 2.70 m (8 ft 10 in).

Note that the formulas give the results in cubic meters; which are multiplied by 1,000 to convert to liters.

Of course, a room is never really closed, gases can go in (fresh air) and out (hot gases and water vapour) so the computations will not be exact.

See also

  • List of basic fire fighting topics
  • - Today's Plan is Tomorrow's Action
  • Fireboats
  • Saint Florian
    Saint Florian

    Saint Florian is a Christian saint, and the patron saint of Poland; Linz, Austria; chimney sweeps; and firefighting. His feast day is May 4. St....
    , the patron saint of firefighters. His cross is widely used as a symbol in firefighters' emblems.
  • Maltese cross
    Maltese cross

    The Maltese cross or Amalfi cross is identified as the symbol of an order of Christian warriors known as the Knights Hospitaller or Knights of Malta....
    , often mistakenly mentioned as the origin of the firefighters symbol.