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Journal Article

Citation

Hull TR, Lebek K, Pezzani M, Messa S. Fire Safety J. 2008; 43(2): 140-150.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.firesaf.2007.06.004

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Toxic product yields from five commercial cables obtained from a steady state tube furnace (SSTF) method (IEC 60695-7-50, Purser furnace) are compared with results from a large-scale test, which uses the physical fire model in the proposed prEN50399-2-2 test, with the addition of effluent gas analysis, using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), and for further comparison, a static tube furnace method (NF X 70-100). This work represents one of the first attempts to establish a relationship between bench- and large-scale toxic product yields for burning cables. This is difficult because the cables have been formulated for low flammability, and therefore do not burn consistently. The tube furnace burns the cable completely, whereas the large-scale test effluent is the result of a combination of flame spread and toxic product yields, both of which are fire scenario dependant. There is significant differentiation between cable types based on composition, and arising because only a portion of the cables burn in the large-scale test, accompanied by possible decomposition of hydrate sheaths. The fire stage of the large-scale test appears to have been replicated in an appropriate manner, given the correspondence of the CO2/CO ratios. The yields of CO2, CO, HCl and smoke show reasonable agreement, given the differences in the extent of burning, and the accuracy of the mass-loss data available for the large-scale test. The yields and extent of burning have been combined to demonstrate the estimation of toxic hazard for a particular fire scenario based around the large-scale test, which shows only marginal sensitivity to the differences in toxic product yield between the SSTF and the large-scale test. Keywords: Fire toxicity; Cables; PVC; Ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer; ATH; Polyolefin; Carbon monoxide Abbreviations: ATH, Aluminium hydroxide (Al(OH)3); EHC, Effective heat of combustion; FPA, Fire propagation apparatus; FED, Fractional effective dose; FTIR, Fourier transform infrared; LC50, Lethal concentration to 50% of population; PVC, Polyvinyl chloride; SSTF, Steady state tube furnace; SSTP Cat 7, Screened-screened twisted pair (a doubly screened data cable meeting the requirements of ISO/IEC 11801 class F)

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