Heat transfer through an insulated steel wall due to hydrocarbon fire

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Modeling the rise in temperature on the safe side of a wall exposed to a hydrocarbon pool fire involves understanding transient heat conduction with time-dependent boundary conditions. The configuration includes a 5mm thick steel layer and a 90mm insulation layer, suggesting a 1D model may be appropriate if heat flux is uniform across the wall. Consideration of radiation heat transfer from hot gases to the steel wall is also crucial. Additional details about system geometry and materials could refine the modeling approach. A numerical solution is likely necessary for accurate results.
u01sdr9
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Afternoon all,

I am interested to hear any and all suggestions as to how one would go about modelling the rise in temperature on the "safe" side of a wall, after a given time period over which the other side was exposed to a hydrocarbon pool fire.

The configuration I have been looking at consists of a steel surface exposed to the fire, mounted on an insulating layer.

I have a definition for the hydrocarbon fire curve, giving flame temperature at any given time and all material properties for the wall sections.

It would be great to hear what people think, cheers!
 
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Hi u01sdr9. Welcome to Physics Forums.

This sounds like a straightforward transient heat conduction problem with time-dependent boundary conditions. More details about the system geometry and materials would be helpful to know whether it should include 2D, or whether a 1D model would be appropriate. Most likely, you would be pursuing a numerical solution.

chet
 
Is the fire lapping at the steel wall, or is it removed at a distance away. In either case the amount of radiation heat transfer from the hot gases to the steel wall would be something to consider.
 
The wall would consist of a 5mm thick steel layer exposed to the fire, backed by 90mm of insulation. I'm Assuming heat flux received by the wall would be uniform across the exposed area so I'm thinking a 1D model would suffice?

Apologies for my complete ignorance on this matter!
 
u01sdr9 said:
The wall would consist of a 5mm thick steel layer exposed to the fire, backed by 90mm of insulation. I'm Assuming heat flux received by the wall would be uniform across the exposed area so I'm thinking a 1D model would suffice?

Apologies for my complete ignorance on this matter!
Yes.
 
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