Impact Statement
Ventilation systems are a crucial aspect in preventing disastrous consequences following road tunnel car accidents. Their purpose is to control the smoke propagation, confining it in a limited area or pushing it away, thus allowing the tunnel users to safely escape. The correct performance of a ventilation system is dictated by different fluid dynamic forcings, i.e. the buoyancy induced by the tunnel fire, the pressure-gradient inertial force produced by meteorological effects on the tunnel entrances and the inertial forces created by the tunnel fans. The relative magnitude of these forcings has a direct impact on the ventilation configuration required to control the spreading of the fire smoke and its stratification within the tunnel. Therefore, we have performed flow visualisation experiments in a reduced-scale tunnel facility to identify the control parameters that allow for the confinement of a buoyant release through a ventilation system equipped with longitudinal and transverse fans.
1. Introduction
Road tunnels, by their nature, are narrow and tubular semi-enclosed structures where the propagation of smoke and heat emitted by accidental fires is potentially difficult to control. On some dramatic occasions, the presence of a fire may induce temperatures rapidly exceeding 1000$\,^\circ$C and release a huge amount of harmful smoke, making the access of firefighters difficult or even impossible. For all these reasons, road accidents occurring within a tunnel are, on average, three times more lethal than accidents that occur on an open road (Reference Bai, Liao and XiaBai, Liao, & Xia, 2020). Indeed, tunnel fires were the cause of catastrophic events worldwide, in which several people were injured or lost their lives, while tunnel facilities suffered extensive damage (Reference Carvel and MarlairCarvel & Marlair, 2005; Reference Fridolf, Nilsson and FrantzichFridolf, Nilsson, & Frantzich, 2013; Reference LeitnerLeitner, 2001; Reference Ren, Zhou, Hu, He and WangRen, Zhou, Hu, He, & Wang, 2019; Reference Vuilleumier, Weatherill and CrausazVuilleumier, Weatherill, & Crausaz, 2002).
Among the different tunnel safety aspects that can be taken into account to reduce the risk in case of fire, forced ventilation systems are one of the most essential. The importance of ventilation systems is twofold (European Commission, 2004): (i) the control of pollutants emitted by road vehicles under normal traffic flow, peak traffic flow and traffic jams; (ii) the control of heat and smoke in case of a fire. The typology of the ventilation system for fire control is typically dictated by the traffic mode (i.e. one- or bi-directional) and by the traffic flow regime (congested or uncongested).
With a one-directional road and uncongested traffic, longitudinal ventilation is the simplest and most cost-efficient solution (figure 1a). With this strategy, the toxic smoke is pushed downstream of the vehicles by a longitudinal flow that blows in the same direction as the travelling cars. The drivers upstream of the fire can then safely evacuate, as far as the longitudinal ventilation velocity is able to prevent the development of the back-layering flow, namely a horizontal gravity current generated at the tunnel ceiling that propagates also upstream of the fire source (Reference Salizzoni, Creyssels, Jiang, Mos, Mehaddi and VauquelinSalizzoni et al., 2018; Reference VauquelinVauquelin, 2008). The minimum air velocity required to keep the upwind portion of the tunnel entirely free of smoke is referred to as the ‘critical velocity’ (Reference Danziger and KennedyDanziger & Kennedy, 1982; Reference ThomasThomas, 1958, Reference Thomas1968). Its dependence on the main factors characterising the tunnel fire has been the subject of numerous studies over the years (e.g. Reference Grant, Jagger and LeaGrant, Jagger, & Lea, 1998; Reference Hu, Huo and ChowHu, Huo, & Chow, 2008; Reference Ingason and LiIngason & Li, 2010; Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Mos and SalizzoniJiang, Creyssels, Mos, & Salizzoni, 2018; Reference Le Clanche, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mehaddi, Candelier and VauquelinLe Clanche et al., 2014; Reference Li, Lei and IngasonLi, Lei, & Ingason, 2010; Reference Vauquelin and WuVauquelin & Wu, 2006). The main drawback of longitudinal ventilation systems is that they tend to destroy the fire-induced thermal stratification of the buoyant smoke whenever the velocity is excessively high, so that the downstream tunnel stretch ends up being entirely filled with smoke (Reference Yang, Hu, Huo, Jiang, Liu and TangYang et al., 2010).
On the other hand, transverse ventilation systems (figure 1b) are appropriate for a bi-directional road and/or congested traffic. Transverse ventilation systems are generally composed of ventilation ducts located above a false ceiling, connected to the tunnel by remote-controlled dampers; alternatively, ventilation shafts fitted with fans may be used (Reference Li and ChowLi & Chow, 2003). The smoke is therefore extracted by vents displaced on the tunnel ceiling. In optimal operating conditions, the smoke should be confined within the extraction zone delimited by two adjacent vents, enabling the evacuation of tunnel users in the two directions (i.e. both upstream and downstream of the fire source). At the same time, the flow should be kept stratified during the extraction, with the hot smoke lying in the upper part of the ceiling, therefore allowing uncontaminated ambient air to circulate in the lower part (figure 1b). Keeping stably stratified conditions is crucial to allow rescue and safety operations to be conducted, especially in the initial stages of a fire. Indeed, the longer the flow maintains its stratification, the longer it enables evacuation procedures. To preserve stratified smoke conditions, the longitudinal flow velocity induced by the action of the vertical vents should be as close as possible to zero near the fire. In order to keep the smoke layer confined within the extraction zone, establishing convergent flows towards this zone is required, but generally not sufficient. Indeed, if the smoke is not entirely removed from the tunnel through the dampers, its buoyancy will force it to propagate away from the duct location, forming a sort of back-layering flow. In general, transverse ventilation systems are more complex to manage compared with longitudinal ones since their optimal operating conditions depend on a larger number of factors (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020; Reference He, Xu, Chen, Liu, Wang and ZhouHe et al., 2018; Reference Lovas, Carlotti, Desanghère and MosLovas, Carlotti, Desanghère, & Mos, 2011; Reference Oucherfi, Gay, Mos and CarlottiOucherfi, Gay, Mos, & Carlotti, 2009; Reference Tao and ZengTao & Zeng, 2022).
A recent systematic study on the aerodynamics of a transverse ventilation system was provided by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020), who examined the ideal case of symmetrical ventilation on smoke propagation and determined the governing parameters for the confinement velocity, i.e. the vertical velocity that enables confining of the smoke to the extraction zone. This particular configuration requires an excellent regulation of the longitudinal air flow in the tunnel as a whole and, therefore, dedicated equipment (such as jet fans) controlled in real time using accurate velocity measurements made in unperturbed areas of the tunnel (e.g. Reference Levoni, Angeli, Cingi, Barozzi and CipolloneLevoni, Angeli, Cingi, Barozzi, & Cipollone, 2021). In many real cases, this ideal flow control cannot be achieved for a number of reasons. For instance, short tunnels may not have a sufficiently long unperturbed zone (i.e. free of smoke and sufficiently far away from jet fans) to perform reliable velocity measurements. Older tunnels may also not have state-of-the-art equipment, nor available space to install it. Less-than-ideal air flow control results in a certain degree of asymmetry in the flow. This asymmetry may also be voluntary, as in the case of unidirectional tunnels in which the preferred direction of the smoke is the traffic direction or when mobile fan units are employed to generate a longitudinal flow to improve the effectiveness of the existing ventilation system in emergencies (Reference Jiang and IngasonJiang & Ingason, 2020).
Another aspect to take into account in designing tunnel ventilation systems is the occurrence of natural ventilation currents, driven by the wind-induced pressure difference between the two tunnel portals (Reference Kubwimana, Salizzoni, Bergamini, Mos, Méjean and SoulhacKubwimana et al., 2018) or by large-scale meteorological effects, as in the case of synoptic pressure differences occurring on the opposite sides of alpine tunnels. Indeed, these can modify the ventilation operation systems by imposing an additional longitudinal flow (Reference He, Xu, Markert, Zhao, Liu, Tao, Wang and FanHe et al., 2020).
For these reasons, there is a rising interest in studying transverse ventilation systems in asymmetric flow conditions, as dictated by natural ventilation, non-ideal operational conditions or by the necessity to implement both longitudinal and transverse systems (usually referred to as ‘combined ventilation systems’), since they may overcome some limitations of the two classical modes (Reference Brousse, Voeltzel, Le Botlan and RuffinBrousse, Voeltzel, Le Botlan, & Ruffin, 2002; Reference Lee, Oh, Oh, Yoo and ShinLee, Oh, Oh, Yoo, & Shin, 2010; Reference Li and ChowLi & Chow, 2003).
Reference Chen, Hu, Zhang, Zhang, Zhang and YangChen et al. (2015) investigated the effect of an increasing distance between the vent on the tunnel ceiling and the heat source, reporting that the larger the distance, the longer the extent of the back-layering length. Reference Tang, Li, Dong, Wang, Mei and HuTang et al. (2017) studied the buoyant smoke stratification conditions that occur in a combined ventilation system while other authors (Reference Tang, He, Mei, Wang and ZhangTang, He, Mei, Wang, & Zhang, 2018; Reference Tang, Li, Mei and DongTang, Li, Mei, & Dong, 2016; Reference Yao, Cheng, Zhang, Zhu, Shi and ZhangYao et al., 2016) reported experiments in which different transverse extraction modes were tested (shaft, vent and centralised mechanical ventilation). In addition, Reference Zhu, Tang, Chen, Wang and XuZhu, Tang, Chen, Wang, and Xu (2020) analysed the effectiveness of a smoke extraction vent placed on tunnel sidewalls in terms of back-layering length and critical velocity. Besides these laboratory experiments, some analytical models were proposed to predict the back-layering length in the case of transverse ventilation systems subjected to a longitudinal flow, reporting a remarkable match with laboratory (Reference Tang, Li, Mei and DongTang et al., 2016; Reference Wang, Yuan, Fang, Tang, Qian and YeWang et al., 2018) or field (Reference Cingi, Angeli, Cavazzuti, Levoni, Stalio and CipolloneCingi et al., 2021; Reference Levoni, Angeli, Stalio, Agnani, Barozzi and CipolloneLevoni et al., 2015) data.
Despite the increasing attention to this topic, there are several aspects that still need to be clarified. To push further our understanding of the flow dynamics in tunnels in the presence of both a transverse and longitudinal forcing, we report herein the results of a series of experiments performed within a reduced-scale tunnel. The experimental set-up is the same as the one recently used by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020). The flow in the tunnel is induced by the presence of a buoyant release, simulating a fire (Reference VauquelinVauquelin, 2008; Reference Vauquelin, Michaux and LucchesiVauquelin, Michaux, & Lucchesi, 2009), and by the mechanical forcing due to (i) extraction vents at the ceiling and (ii) a longitudinal flow imposed by a longitudinal pressure gradient. In this framework, we have analysed the confinement conditions of the buoyant release in terms of (i) the extraction mean velocity, (ii) the flow rate and (iii) the stratification conditions of the flow. Each of these aspects has been studied by adopting different rectangular-shaped vents, variably positioned (centrally or laterally), as well as using vertical solid barriers placed at the tunnel ceiling. Notably, the application of barriers has proved to be very effective in reducing smoke spreading, both with longitudinal (Reference Chaabat, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia, Marro and SalizzoniChaabat et al., 2019; Reference Seike, Kawabata and HasegawaSeike, Kawabata, & Hasegawa, 2014) and transverse (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020; Reference Halawa and SafwatHalawa & Safwat, 2021) ventilation systems. Their effectiveness was, however, never tested in combined ventilation systems. From a practical point of view, with this work we try to answer the following questions:
• For a given imbalance of the longitudinal air flow, what increase in the extraction flow rate (compared with the symmetrical situation) is required to keep the smoke confined within the extraction zone?
• Are given damper shapes still significantly more effective than others when the flow is unbalanced?
• To which extent is smoke stratification in the extraction zone affected by the asymmetry of the flow?
This work is structured as follows: in § 2 we identify the parameters governing the flow dynamics through a dimensional analysis, while § 3 describes the tunnel facility used during the experimental campaign (§ 3.1) and summarises the conditions set in each test (§ 3.2). Section 4 presents and discusses the experimental results in terms of the confinement conditions (§ 4.1) and flow regime (§ 4.2). Conclusions are drawn in § 5.
2. Dimensional analysis and similarity conditions
In analogy with what was presented in previous studies (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020; Reference Le Clanche, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mehaddi, Candelier and VauquelinLe Clanche et al., 2014; Reference Salizzoni, Creyssels, Jiang, Mos, Mehaddi and VauquelinSalizzoni et al., 2018), we perform a dimensional analysis to identify the governing parameters of the flow dynamics. To this end, we consider a flow in an infinitely long tunnel with a fixed rectangular cross-section and equipped with both a longitudinal and transverse ventilation system. A circular source, located along the longitudinal axis of the tunnel floor, releases steadily a buoyant fluid of variable density. In this context, our focus is on the conditions that allow for the confinement of the buoyant release within two extraction fans, therefore preventing the possible formation of a back-layering flow at the tunnel ceiling, whose extent is referred to as $L$ in figure 2(a). Thus, by definition, a confinement condition is characterised by a null value of the back-layering length $L$. The extraction velocity which realises such a ‘confinement’ is here referred to as $U_{e,c}$, and defined as the minimum value of the ratio between the flow extracted by the vents that guarantees $L=0$ and the cross-sectional area of the vents.
The ‘confinement’ velocity $U_{e,c}$ depends on the following parameters: the tunnel geometry (i.e. tunnel height $H$ and width $W$), the characteristics of the buoyant release at the source (its density $\rho _s$, its velocity $W_s$ and the diameter of the source $D_s$), the longitudinal velocity (referred to as $U_t$ and defined as the flow rate of fresh air entering the tunnel divided by the cross-sectional area of the tunnel), the characteristics of the rectangular-shaped vertical vents (the length of the two sides, i.e. $l_x$ and $l_z$, and the spanwise distance between the damper centre and the tunnel centreline $z_c$, see figure 2d), the physical properties of the ambient fluid (the density $\rho _0$, the kinematic viscosity $\nu$ and the molecular diffusivity $D_m$) and the gravitational acceleration $g$. For the sake of simplicity, we neglect possible differences between the viscosities and molecular diffusivities of the two fluids (i.e. the ambient air and the buoyant release). We can therefore formulate the following functional dependence:
involving thirteen dimensional quantities with three independent dimensions (time, length and mass). By invoking the Vaschy–Buckingham theorem (Reference BarenblattBarenblatt, 1996), we can therefore express (2.1) in a non-dimensional form, displaying the dependence of a normalised confinement velocity $U_{e,c}/U_t$ by means of ten non-dimensional controlling parameters
where $Re_s = W_s D_s / \nu$ is the source Reynolds number, $S_c = D_m / \nu$ is the Schmidt number, $A_d = l_x l_z$ is the damper opening area, $S_d = l_x / l_z$ is the damper aspect ratio, $P_d = z_c / H$ is the spanwise damper position, and $\varGamma _{s}$ is the plume Richardson number at the source, defined as
where $\alpha = 0.127$ is a reference value for the top-hat entrainment coefficient for a pure plume (Reference Ezzamel, Salizzoni and HuntEzzamel, Salizzoni, & Hunt, 2015; Reference Hunt and KayeHunt & Kaye, 2005; Reference Morton, Taylor and TurnerMorton, Taylor, & Turner, 1956) and $B_{s} = W_{s} A_{s} g ( \rho _{0} - \rho _{s} ) / \rho _{0}$ is the buoyancy flux at the source, with $A_{s}= \pi D_{s}^{2} / 4$ the area of the source. As is well known (Reference Hunt and KayeHunt & Kaye, 2005), the plume Richardson number allows for a classification of the buoyant releases. Notably, $\varGamma _{s}=1$ indicates a pure plume, i.e. having a dynamical equilibrium between momentum and buoyancy flux; $\varGamma _{s}<1$ indicates a forced plume (Reference MortonMorton, 1959), characterised by an excess of momentum compared with the buoyancy flux; and $\varGamma _{s}>1$ indicates a lazy plume (Reference Hunt and KayeHunt & Kaye, 2005), in which the buoyancy flux exceeds the momentum flux. This latter category includes most plumes from solid or liquid fires (Reference HeskestadHeskestad, 1998). Considering a constant Schmidt number, a constant diameter of the source $D_s$, a fixed tunnel geometry (i.e. a constant aspect ratio $W/H$) and a constant damper opening area $A_d$, (2.2) reduces to
As illustrated by the previous works of Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Mos and SalizzoniJiang et al. (2018) and Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and SalizzoniJiang, Creyssels, Hunt, and Salizzoni (2019), the functional dependence expressed by (2.4) can be further simplified. Firstly, we can assume that the flow becomes independent on the Reynolds number when this exceeds a given critical value (typically $Re_c =600$, according to Reference Arya and LapeArya & Lape, 1990). Secondly, in the case of buoyancy-dominated releases ($\varGamma _s>1$), as shown by Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and SalizzoniJiang et al. (2019) and Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020), the influence of both $\varGamma _s$ and ${\rho _s}/{\rho _0}$ fades out. Indeed, buoyancy-dominated releases lose information about the source conditions, presumably due to the enhanced mixing in the near-source region that characterises lazy plumes (Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and SalizzoniJiang et al., 2019; Reference Marjanovic, Taub and BalachandarMarjanovic, Taub, & Balachandar, 2017). In these conditions, we expect the confinement velocity $U_{e,c}$ to lose dependence on the individual source parameters, i.e. $\rho _s$, $W_s$ and $D_s$, which would play instead a role only by imposing a buoyancy flux $B_{s}$. The formulation of the problem can therefore be simplified considerably as
or, in non-dimensional form, as
where
are the ‘tunnel’ and the ‘extraction’ Froude numbers, respectively, quantifying the ratio between inertia forces (induced by the longitudinal or transverse ventilation system) and the buoyancy forces (induced by the source). Of course, other functional dependencies could be retrieved by adopting different non-dimensional governing parameters. Notably, several authors characterise the flow dynamics by means of the tunnel Richardson number which, in our case, would be simply defined as $Ri = Fr^{-1/3}$ (Reference Salizzoni, Creyssels, Jiang, Mos, Mehaddi and VauquelinSalizzoni et al., 2018). Equivalently, we can also consider a modified Froude number, integrating information about the damper opening area $A_d$ and the tunnel cross-sectional area $\varOmega = WH$, and defined as
In this modified Froude number, obtained by combining three non-dimensional parameters (see (2.2)), the influence of $A_d$ is de facto removed (since $A_d U_{e,c} = Q_{e,c})$, thus implying that the relevant velocity scale would be the one which characterises the impact of the extraction flow on the buoyant release within the tunnel, rather than the extraction velocity at the vents (which of course highly depends on the geometry of the vents themselves). However, since $A_d$ and $\varOmega$ are fixed in the present study, the two Froude numbers only differ by a proportionality constant. Based on our results we, therefore, cannot evaluate which of the two is more appropriate to re-scale the flow variables.
Equation (2.6) defines the similarity conditions for the tunnel ventilation in the presence of a steady source of buoyancy released at the tunnel floor, assuming a fully turbulent flow. To make a link between this idealised condition and a real tunnel fire, we first need to establish a link between the power emitted during the combustion and the actual buoyancy flow released by a fire. The latter is computed as $B_{s} = g \dot {Q_s} / \rho _0 T_0 C_p$ (Reference LindenLinden, 2000), where $\dot {Q_s}$ is the fire heat release rate (HRR), $T_0$ is the reference ambient air temperature and $C_p$ its specific heat capacity at constant pressure. Note that part of the HRR is actually transferred as a radiative flux, heating the surrounding walls, that in turn heat back the ambient air and the smoke mixture. In engineering practice, these complex heat exchange mechanisms are usually neglected when providing a first estimate of the ventilation conditions. It then simply considered that a fraction of the HRR is ‘lost’ in radiation, therefore not contributing to the convective flux, hence to the buoyancy flux. According to the PIARC Committee on Road Tunnels (1999) report, this fraction lies in a range between 20 % and 50 % of the HRR. More specifically Reference DrysdaleDrysdale (2011), in the general context of fire dynamics, suggests a value of 30 %, which agrees well with the estimates presented by Reference Carlotti, Vallerent, Fromy and DemougeCarlotti, Vallerent, Fromy, and Demouge (2012), based on systematic comparisons between models and experiments. Considering an ambient air at 20 $^\circ$C (i.e. $\rho _0=1.204$ kg m$^{-3}$, $T_0=293.15$ K and $C_p=1.006$ kJ (kg K)$^{-1}$), a tunnel height $H=5$ m and estimated HRRs representative of a burning vehicle (10 MW), van (30 MW) and heavy goods truck (100 MW), we can therefore compute the typical values of $Fr_t$ for varying air flow velocities $U_t$ (see table 1). The question is to identify the range of the Froude numbers for which the buoyant smokes are confined within two dampers. Besides, it is essential to know if the confinement conditions guarantee a stable stratification of the buoyant smokes, depending on the shape of the vents. The object of this study is therefore to determine the functional dependence expressed by (2.6) and enlighten the associated flow regimes, depending on the flow stratification. For that purpose, we have planned an experimental campaign to unveil the dependence on the non-dimensional confinement velocity and the different governing parameters.
Finally, it is worth remembering that the similarity conditions expressed by (2.6) can be used to estimate ventilation velocities in real tunnel fires only as far as the fire flames have a limited extension in the vertical direction, so that they can be reliably represented by a steady source of buoyancy placed at the tunnel floor. As verified by Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Mos and SalizzoniJiang et al. (2018) using numerical simulations, this condition holds until the flames do not exceed the tunnel half-height. Of course, applications to real fires would also require consideration of the presence of vehicles and their blocking effect on the ventilation flow (Reference Chaabat, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia, Marro and SalizzoniChaabat et al., 2019).
3. Experimental methodology
3.1 Facility set-up and measurement techniques
The experimental campaign was conducted in a 1/25 reduced-scale tunnel facility (figure 2a) installed at the Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics Laboratory (LMFA) of the École Centrale de Lyon, France. The scaled tunnel is 8.4 m long, with a rectangular cross-section that is 0.36 m wide and 0.18 m high. To allow the flow to be visualised, one sidewall is made of tempered glass while the other sidewall, the floor and the ceiling are made of black medium-density fibreboard panels. The longitudinal flow (figure 2a) is induced by the combined effect of the two fans placed on the tunnel ceiling and the extraction fan placed at the left end of the tunnel. For this latter, we could control the working point of the fan (in terms of revolutions per minute). In the absence of extraction fans on the tunnel ceiling, this would have produced an outflow rate $Q_{out}$ between 20 and 355 m$^{3}$ h$^{-1}$. However, as verified a posteriori (i.e. once the experiments were run), imposing a ‘confinement condition’ implied a $Q_{out}$ always directed towards the interior of the tunnel, despite the action of the fan placed at the tunnel end. The inlet flow rate $Q_{in}$ is measured by means of an air flow cone equipped with a Pitot tube (precision 1 Pa) located at the tunnel entrance (figure 2a). The related longitudinal mean velocity is easily estimated as $U_t=Q_{in} / \varOmega$, where $\varOmega$ is the area of the tunnel cross-section (equal to 2$H^2$ since the tunnel width $W$ is two times the tunnel height $H$).
Fire-induced smoke is simulated by releasing a light gas (a mixture of air and helium) into the tunnel, an approach widely adopted in the literature (Reference Alva, Jomaas and DederichsAlva, Jomaas, & Dederichs, 2017; Reference Chaabat, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia, Marro and SalizzoniChaabat et al., 2019, Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and Marro2020; Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and SalizzoniJiang et al., 2019; Reference Le Clanche, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mehaddi, Candelier and VauquelinLe Clanche et al., 2014; Reference VauquelinVauquelin, 2008). To visualise the buoyant release, oil droplets are used to seed the air–helium mixture, so that it becomes clearly visible in the ambient air when illuminated with a green laser plane.
The light gas is released from a circular source (diameter $D_{s}=0.1$ m) placed on the longitudinal centreline of the tunnel floor. The released air–helium mixture and its seeding are controlled by means of three flow meters (Alicat Scientific Inc., MC-Series, USA). This type of flow meter has an error on the flow rate that does not exceed ${\pm }3$ % if compared with classical volumetric counters (Reference Nironi, Salizzoni, Marro, Mejean, Grosjean and SoulhacNironi et al., 2015; Reference Vidali, Marro, Correia, Gostiaux, Jallais, Houssin, Vyazmina and SalizzoniVidali et al., 2022). The air and helium flow rates can be varied up to 500 l min$^{-1}$ (precision 2.5 l min$^{-1}$) and 200 l min$^{-1}$ (precision 1 l min$^{-1}$), respectively, while the flow rate of the air with nebulised oil can reach a maximum discharge of 20 l min$^{-1}$ (precision 0.1 l min$^{-1}$).
On the tunnel ceiling, two extraction vents are located symmetrically from the source centre and spaced by 5$H$ (figure 2a). On each side, the extraction air flow rate is guaranteed by the presence of a centrifugal fan (flow rate spanning between 5 and 150 m$^{3}$ h$^{-1}$) and measured by means of a rotameter (precision 1 l s$^{-1}$) placed in the extraction duct (see Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020). Part of the tunnel ceiling hosting the vents is easily adjustable so that the vent shape and the duct extension can be modified. Note that the linear scale of the rotameter is designed considering air as working fluid. Since we are instead dealing with a mixture of air and helium, we have to apply a correction of the flow rate estimate, depending on the actual flow density. For this, a sensor (Winsen, Grove - Gas Sensor, Singapore) measuring the oxygen concentration (precision 2 %) in the air flow extracted by the vents is positioned above each rotameter. This, in turn, provides the helium concentration and hence the fluid density. A honeycomb cylinder is mounted to protect the oxygen sensor from the oil drops that could hamper its functionality. The procedure used to link the flow rate provided by the rotameter ($Q_{r1}$ or $Q_{r2}$) with the actual value of the mixture flow rate ($Q_{1}$ or $Q_{2}$) was defined by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020) for the same rotameter used herein (i.e. the one with a nominal measurement range spanning between 16 and 160 m$^{3}$ h$^{-1}$). Briefly, by varying the density ratio $\rho _{s} / \rho _{0}$ and the flow rate in the entrance to the rotameter, we obtain linear relationships of the form $Q_{1} = \beta _{1}(\rho _{s} / \rho _{0}) Q_{r1}$ and $Q_{2} = \beta _{2}(\rho _{s} / \rho _{0}) Q_{r2}$, where the constants $\beta _{1}$ and $\beta _{2}$ depend on the ratio $\rho _{s} / \rho _{0}$ and instrument factory features.
Figure 2(a) also shows the general flow pattern inside the tunnel during the experiments (light blue arrows). In each experiment, the flow rates $Q_1$ and $Q_2$ at the vents are known, together with the corresponding densities ($\rho _1$ and $\rho _2$), because they are measured by the rotameters and oxygen sensors, respectively. Furthermore, also $Q_s$ and $\rho _s$ at the source are known, since they are set by the users as boundary conditions of the problem. At the tunnel inlet, the flow density is $\rho _0$ and the flow rate $Q_{in}$ is directly obtained by means of the Pitot tube in the air flow cone (figure 2a). The outflow $Q_{out}$ can then be determined by invoking mass conservation
Since we are also assuming that all the light fluid is extracted at the ceiling, i.e. $\rho _{out} = \rho _0$, we have
Note that, despite the action of the vent placed at the end of the tunnel, the actual direction of the flow rate $Q_{out}$ is always negative (as shown in figure 2(a) and § 4.1.1). This is due to the flow conditions produced by the fans at the ceiling inducing a current in the two tunnel stretches placed upstream and downstream of the two vents and directed towards them, to which we refer as a ‘suction effect’.
Three different vent (or damper) shapes were employed during the experiments, all having the same opening area $A_d=0.011$ m$^2$ (figure 2b–d). We used the same dampers adopted by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020), notably:
• A damper with a transverse rectangular shape ($0.32 \times 0.034$ m) which occupies almost the entire width of the tunnel, hereinafter called RSD (figure 2b).
• A damper with a square shape ($0.104 \times 0.104$ m) centred with respect to the tunnel centreline, hereinafter called SSD-PC (figure 2c).
• A damper with a square shape ($0.104 \times 0.104$ m) positioned on a side with respect to the tunnel centreline, hereinafter called SSD-PS (figure 2d).
Note that side-positioned square-shape dampers (SSD-PS) are the most common configuration in actual tunnels (e.g. the Trans-Alpine Fréjus Road Tunnel connecting France and Italy), since a fresh air duct is often present next to the smoke extraction duct.
Additionally, we tested the effect of vertical barriers in order to enhance the vents’ capture efficiency (figure 2e). Two planar barriers were hung on the tunnel ceiling close to the vents’ extremity. The height and width of the barriers were $h = H/3$ and $2H$ (i.e. equal to the tunnel width), respectively, and were sufficiently rigid to withstand the aerodynamic forces induced by the flow.
3.2 Experimental procedure
Thanks to the great versatility of the facility, the flow within the tunnel could be modified by varying the following control parameters: (i) the density of the buoyant release; (ii) the velocity at the source of the buoyant release; (iii) the longitudinal mean velocity in the tunnel; (iv) the vertical mean extraction velocity of the vents; (v) the shape of the vents; and (vi) the presence of the barriers. Once the confinement condition is attained, the flow exhibits different stratification behaviours, depending on the setting of the control parameters (we will discuss this point in more detail in § 4.2).
A total of thirteen tests were conducted (table 2) and each of them included 7 to 14 measurements (except for test 12, which has only one measure). For each test, we estimated the mean extraction velocity guaranteeing confinement conditions, depending on a varying intensity of the longitudinal velocity $U_{t}$, varying source conditions and/or vents configurations (vent shape and position as well as the presence of barriers). In most of the tests, we also analysed the stratification conditions within the tunnel.
Each test started by turning on all three fans at the minimum regime. Once the longitudinal velocity at the tunnel inlet became stable, the flowmeters controlling the buoyant release were also turned on. At this stage, the extraction velocity was weak, so that the released buoyant fluid could spread within the whole tunnel. The extraction velocity of the vertical fans was then progressively increased, always imposing the same flow extracted by both fans. When the confinement condition was attained, i.e. with the buoyant release bounded between the two vents, we registered the value of the two extraction velocities, as well as the value of $U_{t}$. The extraction velocity in confinement conditions $U_{e,c}$ was then computed as the average between the values registered at fan no. 1 and fan no. 2 (figure 2a), i.e. $U_{e,c} = (U_{e,c1} + U_{e,c 2})/2$, where $U_{e,c 1} = Q_{1} / A_{d}$ and $U_{e,c 2} = Q_{2} / A_{d}$. Considering all the experiments, the difference between the extraction velocities at the two vents was approximately 10 % at most and systematically higher in fan no. 1, presumably due to the inherent asymmetry of the system. To further explore the relationship between $U_{t}$ and $U_{e,c}$, the longitudinal velocity was slightly increased and the above procedure was repeated. A test was stopped when the flow rate at the extraction vents exceeded the rotameter measurement range.
The values of the governing parameters for each experimental test are listed in table 2. All the experiments were performed with a $\varGamma _{s}>1$, i.e. with buoyancy-dominated releases, in the range $1.6 \leq \varGamma _{s} \leq 14.8$ with a density ratio of $0.26 \leq \rho _{s}/\rho _{0} \leq 0.74$. The values of the Reynolds number at the source are in the range $1050 \leq Re_s \leq 3040$, i.e. well above the critical value $Re_c =600$ indicated by Reference Arya and LapeArya and Lape (1990). The values of $Fr_{e,c}$ were always higher than 1 in all tests, while $Fr_{t}$ had values both lower and higher than 1 in all the experiments involving the rectangular-shaped dampers (RSD).
4. Results and discussions
In the following, we report the results obtained in the experimental campaign. All data are displayed together with the associated measurement uncertainty, estimated as a type B uncertainty (Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology, 2008) considering the manufacturer's specifications for each instrument and expressed in the form of an error bar. Whenever the data are shown without an error bar, this means that the associated uncertainty is lower than the marker size used in the plots.
4.1 Confinement conditions
4.1.1 Velocity
As a first step, focusing on the RSD, we have used our experimental data to unveil the functional dependence between $Fr_{t}$ and $Fr_{e,c}$ and expressed in (2.6). As shown in figure 3(a,b), all the data collapse fairly well on a curve of the form
in which the value of the two coefficients $a=3.45$ and $b=1.13$ (or $a^{*}=0.59$ and $b^{*}=0.19$) were determined by means of a best linear least-square fitting of the data ($R^2=0.99$ and $RMSE=0.30$). According to (4.1), it is evident that, for a fixed $B_s$, as the longitudinal velocity increases, a higher extraction velocity is necessary to confine the buoyant flow, and vice versa. Beside setting experimentally the relation established by (2.6), we also aim at certifying the reliability of the assumptions that led to its formulation. We stress that this functional dependence is based on the assumption that the flow dynamics is not sensitive to the source parameters $\varGamma _s$ and $\rho _s / \rho _0$, a condition that is expected to hold only for $\varGamma _s > 1$ (i.e. buoyancy-dominated releases). To verify this, we have performed experiments imposing varying values of $\varGamma _s$ and $\rho _s / \rho _0$. The results shown in figure 3(a,b) clearly demonstrate that, as already verified by Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and SalizzoniJiang et al. (2019) for a pure longitudinal ventilation and Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020) for pure transverse ventilation, in the range of values herein considered ($\varGamma _s \in [1.6, 14.8]$ and $\rho _s / \rho _0 \in [0.26, 0.74]$), the flow dynamics is insensitive of varying values of both $\varGamma _s$ (figure 3a) and $\rho _s / \rho _0$ (figure 3b). It is also worth noting that both series of experiments, at constant $\rho _s / \rho _0$ and constant $\varGamma _s$, imply a variability in the source Reynolds number of the buoyant releases. However, this variability has no relevant effect on the dependence of $Fr_{e,c}$ on $Fr_{t}$, therefore demonstrating that the flow is independent of $Re_s$, since it has attained a fully turbulent regime.
These results, combined with table 1, allow for the estimate of the confinement ventilation conditions within real tunnels. Considering a burning van, the confinement of the smoke would therefore require imposing velocities within the tunnel of approximately $U_t \simeq 2$ m s$^{-1}$. Interestingly, even though not fully based on a scientifically grounded analysis, this is typically a reference value of the ventilation velocity imposed in a tunnel for engineering practice, when designing a ventilation system.
To highlight the relative role of the two competing velocities ${U_{e,c}}$ and ${U_{t}}$ in confinement conditions, (4.1) can be rearranged as (figure 3c)
that shows how the dependence of the velocity ratio $U_{e,c}/U_{t}$ on the tunnel Froude number $Fr_{t}$ progressively fades out as $Fr_{t}$ increases. This implies that the presence of a source of buoyancy within the tunnel has a marginal role in the flow dynamics as $Fr_{t} \gtrsim 2$, so that the extraction velocity $U_{e,c}$ is almost fully determined by the forcing imposed by the longitudinal velocity $U_{t}$. This means that, as $Fr_{t} \gtrsim 2$, the buoyancy related to the light gas release progressively behaves as a passive scalar.
In figure 3(a–c) we also report the reference values ($Fr_{t}=0.22$, $Fr_{e,c}=1.72$ and $U_{e,c}/U_{t}=7.82$) provided by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020), for a transverse ventilation system without any imposed longitudinal flow. Note that the latter value represents the lower edge condition beyond which (4.1) and (4.2) cannot be extended. For this reason, in figure 3(a–c), this part of the fitted curves is drawn as a dashed line.
Once the vertical vents are activated, the downwind side of the tunnel undergoes a ‘suction effect’. In order to quantify its intensity, the flow rate in the tunnel stretch downstream of the vents was estimated through (3.2) (§ 3.1). As shown by the results reported in figure 3(d), we have that $Q_{out}<0$, meaning that the air flow is directed towards the centre of the tunnel (figure 2a). For low $Fr_t$, when the longitudinal flow is small, the flow in the tunnel is governed by the extraction at the ceiling, so that ${Q_{out}}/{Q_{e,c}} \approx - 1$ (where $Q_{e,c} = A_d U_{e,c}$). As the intensity of the longitudinal flow increases, the absolute value of the ratio ${Q_{out}}/{Q_{e,c}}$ progressively decreases and varies little as $Fr_t \gtrsim 2$. To express the evolution of $Q_{out}/Q_{e,c}$ for increasing $Fr_{t}$, we can deduce an analytical expression combing (3.2) and (4.1), which leads to
Note that (4.3) does not express a one-to-one dependence between ${Q_{out}}/{Q_{e,c}}$ and $Fr_{t}$, since its right-hand side explicitly depends also on other parameters such as $\rho _e / \rho _0$ and $\rho _s / \rho _0$ (which are not uniquely determined by the value of $Fr_{t}$). Notably, the ratio $\rho _e / \rho _0$, that cannot be determined a priori, was observed to span the range 0.74–0.95, a variability that is likely to be due to the occurrence of plug holing (Reference Liu and YangLiu & Yang, 2022) for high values of $Q_{e,c}$. This explains the larger scatter of the data in figure 3(d) (compared with that observed in figure 3(a–c). Plotting (4.3) on the same graph requires setting the values of $\rho _e / \rho _0$, $\rho _s / \rho _0$ and $Q_s / Q_{e,c}$. Adopting their respective averages, as determined over the experimental dataset for the tests 1–8, the trend in the data is reasonably well captured by (4.3).
4.1.2 The effects induced by using different vent shapes and barriers
So far we have focused on experiments with a fixed vent shape and varying source parameters (tests 1–8, table 2). As a further step, we consider the dependence of $Fr_{t}$ on the vent shape and position ((2.6), figure 2b–d), keeping the source parameters unaltered. Furthermore, we also analyse the effects induced by large barriers placed close to the dampers’ end (figure 2e).
From an aerodynamic point of view, figure 4(a,b) indicates a departure from (4.1) and (4.2) when a different shape of the vent is employed. For instance, if we consider a fixed value of $Fr_{t}$, by switching from a rectangular shape to a square shape of the vents, we require a higher value of the extraction Froude number $Fr_{e,c}$ to attain confinement conditions (figure 4a), and vice versa. Furthermore, also a change in the position of the vents impacts negatively on the ventilation conditions needed to confine the buoyant release, since an even higher $Fr_{e,c}$ is required.
Therefore, we can state that the shape and position of the dampers significantly impact the conditions required to confine the buoyant smoke. As already exposed by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020), the RSD leads to the best performance, while the SSD-PS is able to confine the buoyant plume only with very high velocities. This result is also in agreement with the findings by Reference Oucherfi, Gay, Mos and CarlottiOucherfi et al. (2009), based on numerical simulations, indicating that rectangular (slit) dampers show enhanced performance in terms of efficiency and yield with respect to dampers with different aspect ratio.
By assuming that the coefficient $a$ is fixed in (4.1), new values for the coefficient $b$ for the cases with squared vents can be found. In particular, we obtain $b=2.42$ ($b^{*}=0.40$) for the SSD-PC case and $b=3.41$ ($b^{*}=0.57$) for the SSD-PS case. These fitting curves (figure 4a,b) are also in agreement with the results of Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020) for the same vent shape (even though they are obtained adopting a slightly different criterion to determine the confinement conditions). Therefore, we can assert that a combined ventilation system, differently from a purely transverse one, allows for the obtainment of total confinement (i.e. $L/H=0$) even with centred and off-centred squared dampers.
A possible way to improve the effectiveness of an existing ventilation system is the deployment of solid barriers in the tunnel ceiling in emergency situations. The main action of the barriers is to block the propagation of the gravity current generated by the buoyant release once impacted the tunnel ceiling (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020). Furthermore, for longitudinal ventilation, their set-up improves the control of the back-layering length by locally increasing the longitudinal mean velocity in the tunnel cross-section (Reference Chaabat, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia, Marro and SalizzoniChaabat et al., 2019), hence requiring a slower $U_{t}$ with respect to the case of an empty tunnel. With a combined ventilation system, the barriers should guarantee both the aforementioned beneficial effects.
Tests 9, 11 and 13 (table 2), reported in figure 4(a,b), were conducted specifically to quantify the effect of the barriers on the flow. It can be appreciated that vertical barriers are effective, when used combined with square-shaped dampers, in reducing the extraction velocity required to impose confinement conditions, compared with the case of an empty tunnel. Instead, with RSD, the beneficial action of the barriers is limited or negligible (figure 4a), since their opening already spans the whole tunnel width (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020). The effect of barriers with the square-shaped dampers can be summarised as follows (figure 4a,b): the SSD-PS with the barriers perform in a similar way as the SSD-PC without the presence of the barriers and, in turn, the SSD-PC behave as they were RSD, thanks to the disposition of the vertical barriers.
In figure 4(c), the experimental data are presented together with estimates given by (4.3), plotted adopting values of $\rho _e / \rho _0$, $\rho _s / \rho _0$, $Q_s / Q_{e,c}$ and $b$ representative of different series of tests. For what concerns the flow rate within the tunnel, for increasing $Fr_{t}$, the ratio $Q_{out}/Q_{e,c}$ exhibits a shift, depending on the source morphology and the presence or absence of the barriers (figure 4c). As already noticed, the SSD-PS with the barriers and the SSD-PC without barriers behave similarly, but they tend towards a lower value of $Q_{out}/Q_{e,c}$ than the cases SSD-PC with barriers and RSD (both with and without barriers). In other words, for the same $Fr_{t}$, SSD-PS with the barriers and the SSD-PC without barriers produce a higher negative flow rate $Q_{out}$ compared with the other cases (except for the SSD-PS without barriers that produce an even higher negative flow rate).
4.2 Flow regimes
In the experiments we could observe that, once confined within the two extraction fans, the buoyant fluid can achieve different stratification conditions. These are dictated by two competing mechanisms, namely the buoyancy effects that tend to stabilise and maintain the stratification, and the inertial forces that promote mixing within the flow (Reference Yang, Hu, Huo, Jiang, Liu and TangYang et al., 2010). Based on the visualisations of the distribution of the buoyant flow, we could identify four different flow regimes (see figure 5). First of all, we clearly observe two limiting conditions:
• Regime I (figure 5a): the flow is stratified, with the light gas lying close to the tunnel ceiling, since the buoyancy effects prevail over turbulent mixing;
• regime IV (figure 5d): the buoyant fluid is present only downwind the source due to the overwhelming effect of the longitudinal velocity.
More subtle to identify, but nevertheless systematically observed, are two other regimes. These are associated with the rise of asymmetries of the flow with respect to the source and the progressive disruption of a clear boundary between the upper light layer and the fresh air below:
• Regime II (figure 5b): the buoyant fluid is unstratified on the upwind side, due to the growing role of Kelvin–Helmholtz instabilities, and stratified at the downwind side;
• regime III (figure 5c): the turbulent fluctuations overcome the density gradients, so that the light gas mixes with the ambient air, on both sides of the source.
As a first step, our focus is on the occurrence of flow regimes as a function of the two control parameters $Fr_{t}$ and $Fr_{e,c}$ (or $Fr_{e,c}^{*}$), which we present in figure 6(a) for the RSD. Interestingly, we observe an almost perfect succession of the four regimes, as identified in figure 5, as both the longitudinal and extraction velocities increase. For values lower than $Fr_{t} \approx 0.54$ and $Fr_{e,c} \approx 3.07$, the flow is stably stratified (figure 5(a), regime I). For larger values of the Froude numbers, the flow becomes partly stratified (on the left side) and partly unstratified (on the right side), showing an intermediate condition (figure 5(b), regime II) as long as $Fr_{t}$ and $Fr_{e,c}$ do not exceed the values of 0.96 and 4.48, respectively. When $Fr_{t} \gtrsim 1$ and $Fr_{e,c} \gtrsim 4.85$, the flow exhibits an unstratified flow regime (figure 5(c), regime III) and when the tunnel and the extraction Froude number overcome the thresholds equal to $\approx 1.30$ and $\approx 5.70$, respectively, the buoyant fluid is completely pushed downwind the left vent by the longitudinal flow (figure 5(d), regime IV). To better visualise these limits, we have qualitatively highlighted the occurrence of the different flow regimes with RSD by using a grey colour scale in figure 6(a).
The implementation of dampers with different shapes highly affects the buoyant flow regime (additionally evidenced in figure 6(b) through the grey colour scale that reports the limits individuated for the RSD as a benchmark). Indeed, placing both the SSD-PC and the SSD-PS prevents the occurrence of a stratified flow (regimes I and II), so that only regimes III and IV can actually occur. The situation can somehow be improved using the barriers. Both in the case of RSD and SSD-SP, the best and the worst vents, respectively, barriers have no major role in altering the flow regimes (figure 6b). We can instead observe a relevant effect for the SSD-PC (reported with hollow and filled diamonds in figure 6b). Indeed, the adoption of the barriers induces a significant reduction of the Froude number required to confine the buoyant release, which goes with a change of the respective flow regime, switching from the unstratified condition of regimes III and IV to the stratified condition of regime I.
5. Conclusions
By means of a flow visualisation technique, a series of experiments were carried out by releasing a light fluid (simulating the presence of a fire) within a tunnel with a rectangular cross-section and equipped with both longitudinal and transverse ventilation systems. Two ceiling extractor vents were located on each side of the plume source. The investigation encompassed different combinations of the source parameters as well as different geometrical configurations (rectangular and square shape) and arrangements (central and lateral) of the vents. The effect of the deployment of large fixed vertical barriers at the tunnel ceiling was also considered, by means of dedicated tests. We have focused on the flow conditions that allow the light gas release to be fully confined between two vertical vents, avoiding the formation of back-layering flows. The main outcomes can be summarised in the following points.
(i) If the vent configuration is kept fixed (e.g. with rectangular-shaped vents), the only flow control parameters are the tunnel Froude number $Fr_{t}$ and the extraction Froude number $Fr_{e,c}$, which are shown to be linked by a relationship of the form $Fr_{e,c} = a Fr_{t} + b$. This implies that other parameters characterising the buoyant release, such as the plume Richardson number $\varGamma _s$ and the density ratio $\rho _s / \rho _0$, play a marginal role in the flow dynamics within the tunnel, as already observed for other ventilation systems (Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al., 2020; Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Mos and SalizzoniJiang et al., 2018, Reference Jiang, Creyssels, Hunt and Salizzoni2019).
(ii) In the tunnel stretch downstream of the vertical vents, the flow rate is directed in the opposite direction with respect to the longitudinal flow towards the dampers. This ‘suction effect’ progressively fades out for increasing the intensity of the imposed longitudinal flow. Therefore the ratio $Q_{out}/Q_{e,c}$ is reduced in magnitude for increasing $Fr_{t}$, approaching a constant value.
(iii) Both the shape and the location of the dampers are pivotal parameters in controlling buoyant plumes in tunnels. Indeed, as pointed out by Reference Chaabat, Salizzoni, Creyssels, Mos, Wingrave, Correia and MarroChaabat et al. (2020) for a transverse ventilation system, using centred square dampers instead of rectangular dampers (which occupy the entire tunnel width), requires a higher longitudinal velocity (or a higher extraction velocity) to achieve confinement conditions. The situation is even worsened when off-centred square dampers are considered.
(iv) The installation of vertical barriers with rectangular dampers does not improve the effectiveness in the confinement of the buoyant release. This is because the dampers and the barriers have the same width, hence the beneficial effect induced by the barriers is marginal. The situation in which the barriers are used in combination with centred and off-centred square dampers is different. In these circumstances, the presence of the barriers permits the dampers to make a qualitative leap: with the barriers, the off-centred square dampers work as the centred square dampers in empty tunnels and, in turn, centred square dampers have the same performance as the rectangular dampers. This is due to the fact that the buoyant back-layer flow is blocked by the barrier and channelled towards the vent.
(v) The confined buoyant plume can exhibit four distinct flow regimes, i.e. stratified (regime I), intermediate condition (regime II), unstratified (regime III) or an extreme condition where the plume is deviated by the strong longitudinal velocity towards the downstream vent (regime IV). With rectangular dampers, if $Fr_{t} \lesssim 0.54$ and $Fr_{e,c} \lesssim 3.07$, the buoyant plume is stratified while if $Fr_{t} \gtrsim 1$ and $Fr_{e,c} \gtrsim 4.85$ the buoyant flow first becomes unstratified and then, for even greater values of $Fr_{t}$ and $Fr_{e,c}$, the plume moves entirely towards the downstream damper. In this condition ($Fr_{t} \gtrsim 2$), the role of buoyancy on the flow dynamics becomes marginal and the velocity ratio $U_{e,c} / U_{t}$ tends to a constant value. With different damper shapes and positions, the buoyant plume can be confined only in unstratified conditions. Also with regard to the stratification conditions, the use of barriers is effective only for the case of centred square dampers and allows for a switch toward regime I.
These results provide important information for combined ventilation system design and management, reporting the drawbacks and potentiality of using different vent shapes and positions as well as large vertical barriers.
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to the assistant-engineer H. Correia (LMFA) for the technical aid in the realisation of the experimental set-up.
Declaration of interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Funding statement
This work was supported by the Région Auvergne-Rhéne-Alpes (France) within the COVENTU Project (grant number: GFC 2020-043).
Author contributions
M.M. and P.C. designed, performed all measurements and pre-processed the data. C.P. processed, analysed the data and wrote the manuscript, with supervision from P.S. Lastly, D.A., T.K. and A.M. gave useful comments and revised the manuscript.
Data availability statement
Raw data are available from the corresponding author.
Ethical standards
The research meets all ethical guidelines, including adherence to the legal requirements of the study country.