Validation of Heat Transfer Thermal Decomposition and Container Pressurization of Polyurethane Foam.
Author(s) -
Sarah Scott,
Amanda B. Dodd,
Marvin Larsen,
Jill Suo-Anttila,
Kenneth Erickson
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1158664
Subject(s) - cabin pressurization , polyurethane , latin hypercube sampling , container (type theory) , materials science , heat transfer , work (physics) , thermal , thermal decomposition , decomposition , mechanical engineering , computer science , process engineering , composite material , mechanics , thermodynamics , engineering , mathematics , chemistry , monte carlo method , physics , statistics , organic chemistry
Polymer foam encapsulants provide mechanical, electrical, and thermal isolation in engineered systems. In fire environments, gas pressure from thermal decomposition of polymers can cause mechanical failure of sealed systems. In this work, a detailed uncertainty quantification study of PMDI-based polyurethane foam is presented to assess the validity of the computational model. Both experimental measurement uncertainty and model prediction uncertainty are examined and compared. Both the mean value method and Latin hypercube sampling approach are used to propagate the uncertainty through the model. In addition to comparing computational and experimental results, the importance of each input parameter on the simulation result is also investigated. These results show that further development in the physics model of the foam and appropriate associated material testing are necessary to improve model accuracy.
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