Composite metal foams can pass so-called “simulated pool fire testing” with flying colors, report researchers.
This step moves the material closer to use in applications such as packaging and transportation of hazardous materials.
In addition, the researchers used these experimental data to develop a model for predicting how variations in the Composite metal foams (CMFs) would affect its performance.
The test, called “Simulated pool fire testing” is not a computational simulation. It’s an experimental test that materials must pass in order to be considered for use in manufacturing rail tank cars that transport hazardous materials.
In simulated pool fire testing, researchers expose a panel of material to a temperature of at least 816 degrees Celsius (1,500 degrees Fahrenheit) on one side for 100 minutes. A suite of thermal sensors rests on the other side of the panel. If those protected sensors register a temperature of 427 degrees Celsius (800 degrees Fahrenheit) or higher at any point during the 100 minutes, the material fails the test.
Testing composite metal foams
For the tests, the North Carolina State University researchers used panels made of steel-steel CMF. CMF is a foam that consists of hollow, metallic spheres—made of materials such as carbon steel, stainless steel, or titanium—embedded in a metallic matrix made of steel, aluminum, or other metallic alloys. “Steel-steel” CMF indicates that the spheres and the matrix were both made of steel.
“A solid steel plate with the same thickness hits 427 degrees Celsius in about 12 minutes,” says Afsaneh Rabiei, first author of a paper on the work and a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. “In three rounds of testing, our steel-steel CMF was exposed to the same temperatures of 825 degrees Celsius for the full 100 minutes—and the highest temperatures recorded on the back of the panel using protected sensors were between 351 and 379 degrees Celsius. It is worth noting that the steel-steel CMF panel is only one-third of the weight of the solid steel plate that failed the test in about 12 minutes.
“In other words, the CMF passed the test by a wide margin,” Rabiei says. “Based on the experimental and modeling results, as well as the uncertainty studies—all of which were reported in this paper—a 15.9 mm thick steel-steel CMF met the acceptance criteria for the simulated pool fire test by a large margin. We were testing the CMF for use as novel insulation system for transportation of HAZMAT, but it’s also relevant to applications from military vehicles to architectural structures.”
Predicting thermal properties
The new research builds on previous work that found CMFs are significantly more effective at insulating against high heat than the conventional metals and alloys that they’re made of, such as steel. Taken together, the findings highlight CMF’s potential for use in storing and transporting nuclear material, hazardous materials, explosives, and other heat-sensitive materials, as well as space exploration.
But the new research also gave researchers a lot of data they could use to help fine-tune the desirable characteristics of CMFs, depending on the intended application.
“Because we can control the features of the CMF, such as the size of the hollow spheres in the foam, we wanted to create a model that could be used to predict how different types of CMF would perform in simulated pool fire testing,” Rabiei says. “This would allow us to design future foams in order to find the best balance of physical, mechanical, and thermal properties.”
The researchers built the model by drawing on data from their simulated pool fire test experiments. And based on rigorous evaluations of the model, they found that the model’s predictions are accurate to within 10 degrees Celsius.
“Our next steps include expanding the model to allow us to simulate so-called torch-fire testing,” Rabiei says. “Torch-fire testing is also required for materials to be used in tank cars that transport hazardous materials, but it requires larger samples—panels that measure 4 feet by 4 feet.”
The paper appears in the International Journal of Thermal Sciences. Coauthors of the paper are K. Karimpour, a high school volunteer in Rabiei’s lab, and Debashis Basu and Marc Janssens of the Southwest Research Institute.
Support for the work came from the Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
Source: NC State
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