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MINA Handbook. Chapter 11: Fire & Explosion Investigation. Investigating Fire Mishaps. What Are We Looking For?. The point of fire origin The source of ignition Why a small fire became big The reason for causalities Did the fire deviate from normal behavior
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MINA Handbook Chapter 11: Fire & Explosion Investigation
What Are We Looking For? • The point of fire origin • The source of ignition • Why a small fire became big • The reason for causalities • Did the fire deviate from normal behavior The first step is to rule out arson!
Determine Cause • As with any investigation look past the proximate cause for the root cause. • Suppose a fire starts in a club kitchen when a deep fat fryer ignites and spreads through the kitchen • The cause is not just “Deep fat fryer overheated.” • Was the control set too high? • Did the control contacts stick? • Why didn’t the high temperature cut-off fail to work?
Fire patterns? Colors? Soot?
Handout Discussion • Additional Information on Fire
Types of Explosions • Mechanical • High pressure gas cylinder • BLEVE (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion) • Chemical • Combustion explosion • Flammable gases • Vapors of ignitable (flammable and combustible) liquids • Dusts • Low explosives • High explosives • Back draft explosions • Electrical • Nuclear
Explosion Effects • Damage – low order, high order • Blast Front – rate of pressure rise vs. maximum pressure • Shrapnel effect • Thermal effect • Seismic Effect • Seated explosions • High pressure & rapid rates of rise • Craters • NonSeated explosions • Moderate pressures & rates of rise • Diffuse fuels
Human Injury Criteria THRESHOLD SERIOUS WOUNDS .6 PSI: Glass 3.0 PSI: Glass 2.4 : Eardrum 3.5 : Eardrum 3.0 : Knockdown 10.0 : Knockdown 10.0 : 1% Lethal 25.5 : 90% Lethal
Property Damage .15 PSI: Typical window breakage 1.0 : Houses uninhabitable 2.0 : Collapse of roofs/walls 3.5 : 50% destruction of homes 6.0 : Destruction of most buildings 9.0 : Box cars demolished 30.0 : Steel towers down
Pressure (PSO) versus Distance (Quantity Distance)
Evidence of Explosion • Wide dispersal of wreckage • Metal fragmentation • Shrapnel • Surface spalling • Unusual damage to heavy structures • Brittle fractures in ductile materials • Outward deformation • Radiating fire pattern • Fragment penetration force • Cratering of penetration holes • Splash • Edge turnover • Gas wash effect • Shredded or teased fabrics • Chemical residue analysis • Autopsy evidence • Witness testimony
Explosion Investigation • Identify explosion or fire • Identify type of explosion • Establish origin • Establish fuel type and explosion type • Identify ignition source • Identify damage effects • Preblast & postblast fire damage