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The Rate-Limiting Mechanism for the Heterogeneous Burning of Cylindrical Iron Rods
Author(s) -
Nicholas R. Ward,
Ted Steinberg
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of astm international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1546-962X
DOI - 10.1520/jai102269
Subject(s) - materials science , work (physics) , rod , heat transfer , flammability , limiting , drop (telecommunication) , composite material , mechanics , thermodynamics , mechanical engineering , physics , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , engineering
This paper presents the findings of an investigation into the rate-limiting mechanism for the heterogeneous burning in oxygen under normal gravity and microgravity of cylindrical iron rods. The original objective of the work was to determine why the observed melting rate for burning 3.2-mm diameter iron rods is significantly higher in microgravity than in normal gravity. This work, however,\udalso provided fundamental insight into the rate-limiting mechanism for heterogeneous burning. The paper includes a summary of normal-gravity and microgravity experimental results, heat transfer analysis and post-test microanalysis of quenched samples. These results are then used to show that heat transfer across the solid/liquid interface is the rate-limiting mechanism for melting and burning, limited by the interfacial surface area between the molten drop and solid rod. In normal gravity, the work improves the\udunderstanding of trends reported during standard flammability testing for metallic materials, such as\udvariations in melting rates between test specimens with the same cross-sectional area but different crosssectional\udshape. The work also provides insight into the effects of configuration and orientation, leading to an improved application of standard test results in the design of oxygen system components. For microgravity applications, the work enables the development of improved methods for lower cost metallic material flammability testing programs. In these ways, the work provides fundamental insight\udinto the heterogeneous burning process and contributes to improved fire safety for oxygen systems in applications involving both normal-gravity and microgravity environments

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