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Fire Dynamics in Long and Narrow Confined Spaces
This special issue belongs to the section “Fire Risk Assessment and Safety Management in Buildings and Urban Spaces“.
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
With the rapid development of underground infrastructure—including transportation tunnels, subterranean corridors, utility galleries, and large-scale culverts—fire safety in long and narrow confined spaces has become a critical engineering challenge. Unlike open environments, fires in these highly constrained structures are strongly governed by wall confinement, limited air supply, and restricted ventilation pathways. These factors give rise to unique flame and smoke behaviors, such as plume stretching, intensified heat feedback, accelerated back-layering, and complex smoke stratification.
The increasing diversity of fire hazards in such confined environments further amplifies the complexity of fire dynamics. Fires involving moving vehicles, especially under congested or bidirectional traffic conditions, can generate strong longitudinal airflow disturbances and unpredictable patterns of flame spread. Fuel leakage and spill fires introduce dynamically evolving burning zones that interact strongly with ventilation systems, while electrical cable fires in underground utility tunnels or cable galleries may exhibit rapid flame spread, persistent smoke release, and high-toxicity emissions. These phenomena pose sustained challenges for early detection, fire suppression, and emergency response. Understanding how these hazards develop—and how smoke is transported, accumulated, or stratified under varying geometric constraints and ventilation strategies—is essential to improving fire protection design and emergency management in long and narrow confined spaces.
This Special Issue aims to advance the scientific understanding of fire dynamics and smoke propagation mechanisms in long and narrow confined environments. Contributions involving experimental studies, theoretical analyses, numerical simulations, detection and suppression technologies, and engineering applications are all welcome. By integrating interdisciplinary insights, this Special Issue seeks to promote innovative safety strategies and technical solutions for long and narrow confined spaces.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Fire growth and heat-transfer mechanisms in long and narrow confined spaces.
- Smoke stratification, back-layering, and longitudinal smoke transport.
- Fire behaviors of moving vehicles, fuel spill fires, and cable fires in long and narrow confined spaces.
- Effects of geometry, ventilation patterns, and boundary constraints on fire development.
- Modeling, prediction, scaling laws, and data-driven approaches for confined space fires.
- Fire detection, suppression, and emergency response strategies in long and narrow confined spaces.
Dr. Weibing Jiao
Prof. Dr. Weiguang An
Dr. Tao Wang
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
Manuscripts should be submitted online at www.mdpi.com by registering and logging in to this website. Once you are registered, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline. All submissions that pass pre-check are peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 250 words) can be sent to the Editorial Office for assessment.
Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a single-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Fire is an international peer-reviewed open access monthly journal published by MDPI.
Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 2400 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.
Keywords
- fire dynamics
- smoke propagation
- long and narrow confined spaces
- tunnel fires
- plume behavior
- fuel spill fires
- cable tunnel fires
- ventilation effects
- ceiling jet
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