Impact of Combustible Linings in the Simulated Fluid Dynamics of a Compartment Fire

Calderon, Ignacio; Majdalani, Agustin H.; Jahn, Wolfram

Abstract

The increasing use of engineered timber in modern architecture raises critical concerns about fire safety, particularly when combustible linings are exposed within compartments. Classical compartment fire framework, largely derived from non-combustible enclosures, may not adequately capture the dynamics introduced by materials such as cross-laminated timber (CLT). This study investigates how combustible linings influence the fluid dynamic fields of compartment fires derived from the thermal field using CFD simulations informed by experimental data. A series of configurations, from inert to fully lined compartments, were analysed to isolate the effect of burning boundaries. Results show a progressive intensification of fire conditions with additional combustible surfaces: upper-layer temperatures approach 900 degrees C, smoke layers thicken, and stratification becomes more pronounced. Velocity fields are similarly affected, with peak inflow and outflow velocities doubling compared to the inert case and new vortical structures emerging near burning walls. These findings highlight that exposed CLT significantly amplifies radiative and convective heat feedback, modifying both temperature distributions and flow patterns in ways not captured by the traditional framework based on the inverse opening factor. This underscores the need for performance-based fire design approaches integrating both thermal and fluid dynamic perspectives, ensuring safe implementation of timber in modern construction.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:001701233100001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: Fire
Volumen: 9
Número: 2
Editorial: MDPI
Fecha de publicación: 2026
DOI:

10.3390/fire9020080

Notas: ISI