TY - JOUR
T1 - Theoretical and numerical study on the heat extraction of shafts in a naturally ventilated urban highway tunnel fire under ambient wind environment
AU - Wu, Peng
AU - Huang, Qianqian
AU - Zhou, Ru
AU - Hao, Min
AU - Jiang, Juncheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Shafts are widely used in naturally ventilated urban highway tunnels, and their heat extraction in fires is highly susceptible to external wind conditions, yet research on their heat removal characteristics under relevant conditions remains inadequate. This study combines theoretical analysis with numerical simulations to explore the heat removal of vertical shafts in a naturally ventilated urban highway tunnel under ambient wind environment. The findings indicate that heat removal in shafts can be divided into three stages: (I) plug-holing, (II) stable smoke layer, and (III) downdraught. By non-dimensionalizing the environmental wind speed, the inflection points of heat extraction are determined: when vwind⁎⁎ = 3, heat dissipation enters stage II, and when vwind⁎⁎ = 6, heat dissipation enters stage III. When downdraught does not occur, vwind⁎⁎ = 4.8 corresponds to the most unfavorable point for heat extraction. For the same other conditions, the smaller the fire source power, the more pronounced the suppressive effect of environmental wind on shaft heat removal. A predictive model for internal temperature and heat extraction of the vertical shaft is developed, and the predicted results align well with the simulation data. This study provides valuable insights into the operation of smoke extraction shafts under ambient wind conditions.
AB - Shafts are widely used in naturally ventilated urban highway tunnels, and their heat extraction in fires is highly susceptible to external wind conditions, yet research on their heat removal characteristics under relevant conditions remains inadequate. This study combines theoretical analysis with numerical simulations to explore the heat removal of vertical shafts in a naturally ventilated urban highway tunnel under ambient wind environment. The findings indicate that heat removal in shafts can be divided into three stages: (I) plug-holing, (II) stable smoke layer, and (III) downdraught. By non-dimensionalizing the environmental wind speed, the inflection points of heat extraction are determined: when vwind⁎⁎ = 3, heat dissipation enters stage II, and when vwind⁎⁎ = 6, heat dissipation enters stage III. When downdraught does not occur, vwind⁎⁎ = 4.8 corresponds to the most unfavorable point for heat extraction. For the same other conditions, the smaller the fire source power, the more pronounced the suppressive effect of environmental wind on shaft heat removal. A predictive model for internal temperature and heat extraction of the vertical shaft is developed, and the predicted results align well with the simulation data. This study provides valuable insights into the operation of smoke extraction shafts under ambient wind conditions.
KW - Ambient wind
KW - Heat extraction
KW - Temperature distribution
KW - Tunnel fire
KW - Vertical shafts
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85219661566&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.icheatmasstransfer.2025.108816
DO - 10.1016/j.icheatmasstransfer.2025.108816
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85219661566
SN - 0735-1933
VL - 164
JO - International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer
JF - International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer
M1 - 108816
ER -