Dictionary Definition
deflagration n : combustion that propagates
through a gas or along the surface of an explosive at a rapid rate
driven by the transfer of heat
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The act of deflagrating; an intense fire; a conflagration or explosion. Specifically, combustion that spreads subsonically via thermal conduction.
Quotations
- 1849 Heinrich Rose - A Practical Treatise of Chemical Analysis
- If, for example, the mixture of oxygen and hydrogen was twenty volumes, and three volumes of oxygen remained after the deflagration, the mixture consisted of six volumes of hydrogen and six volumes of oxygen.
- 1998 Michael R Bromwich - The FBI Laboratory: An Investigation
into Laboratory Practices & Alleged Misconduct
- Black powder . . . It produces a relatively fast burn or deflagration rather than a detonation and is classified as "low explosive".
Translations
intense fire
- German: Verpuffung
- Italian: deflagrazione
- Korean: 폭연 (pogyeon)
- Spanish: deflagración
Related terms
Antonyms
- (with respect to speed of propagation): detonation
Hypernyms
Extensive Definition
Deflagration (Lat: de + flagrare, "to burn down")
is a technical term describing subsonic combustion that usually
propagates through thermal
conductivity (hot burning material heats the next layer of cold
material and ignites it). Most "fire" found in daily life, from
flames to explosions, is technically
deflagration. Deflagration is different from detonation which is supersonic and propagates
through shock
compression.
Applications
In engineering applications, deflagrations are easier to control than detonations. Consequently, they are better suited when the goal is to move an object (a bullet in a gun, or a piston in an internal combustion engine) with the force of the expanding gas. Typical examples of deflagrations are combustion of a gas-air mixture in a gas stove or a fuel-air mixture in an internal combustion engine, a rapid burning of a gunpowder in a firearm or pyrotechnic mixtures in fireworks.Flame physics
We can better understand the underlying flame physics by constructing an idealized model consisting of a uniform one-dimensional tube of unburnt and burned gaseous fuel, separated by a thin transitional region of width \delta\; in which the burning occurs. The burning region is commonly referred to as the flame or flame front. In equilibrium, thermal diffusion across the flame front is balanced by the heat supplied by burning.There are two characteristic timescales which are
important here. The first is the thermal diffusion timescale
\tau_d\;, which is approximately equal to
\tau_d \simeq \delta^2 / \kappa,
where \kappa \; is the thermal
diffusivity. The second is the burning timescale \tau_b that
strongly decreases with temperature, typically as
\tau_b\propto \exp[\Delta U/(k_B T_f)],
where \Delta U\; is the activation barrier for
the burning reaction and T_f\; is the temperature developed as the
result of burning that can be found from thermodynamics (the
so-called "flame temperature").
For a stationary moving deflagration front, these
two timescales are equal: The heat generated by burning is equal to
the heat carried away by heat
transfer. This lets us find the characteristic width \delta\;
of the flame front:
\tau_b = \tau_d\;,
thus
\delta \simeq \sqrt .
Now, the thermal flame front propagates at a
characteristic speed S_l\;, which is simply equal to the flame
width divided by the burn time:
S_l \simeq \delta / \tau_b \simeq \sqrt .
This simplified model neglects the change of
temperature and thus the burning rate across the deflagration
front. Also this model neglects the possible influence of turbulence. As a result, this
derivation gives the laminar flame speed -- hence the
designation S_l\;.
Damaging deflagration events
Damage to buildings, equipment and people can
result from a large-scale short-duration deflagration. The nature
of the damage is primarily a function of the total amount of fuel
burned in the event (total energy available), the maximum flame
velocity that is achieved, and the manner in which the expansion of
the combustion gases is contained.
In free-air deflagrations, there is a continuous
variation in deflagration effects relative to maximum flame
velocity. When flame velocities are low, the effect of a
deflagration is the release of heat. Some authors use the term
flash
fire to describe these low-speed deflagrations. At flame
velocities near the speed of sound, the energy released is in the
form of pressure and the results resemble a detonation. Between these
extremes both heat and pressure are released.
right|thumb|300pxWhen
a low-speed deflagration occurs within a closed vessel or
structure, pressure effects can produce damage due to expansion of
gases, as a secondary effect. The heat released by the deflagration
causes the combustion gases and excess air to try to expand
thermally as well. The net result is that the volume of the vessel
or structure needs to either expand/fail to accommodate the hot
combustion gases, or build internal pressure to contain them. The
risks of deflagration inside waste storage drums is a growing
concern among storage facilities . see drum
deflagration videos
See also
References
deflagration in German: Deflagration
deflagration in Spanish: Deflagración
deflagration in French: Déflagration
deflagration in Italian: Deflagrazione
deflagration in Dutch: Deflagratie
deflagration in Polish: Deflagracja
deflagration in Russian: Дефлаграция
deflagration in Swedish:
Deflagration
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
blaze,
blazing, blistering, branding, burning, burst, calcination, carbonization, cauterization, cautery, cineration, combustion, concremation, cracking, cremation, cupellation, destructive
distillation, distillation, distilling, flaming, flare, flare-up, flash, flash fire, incineration, outburst, oxidation, oxidization, parching, pyrolysis, refining, scorching, scorification, searing, self-immolation,
singeing, smelting, suttee, the stake, thermogenesis, vesication