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Fire safety experiments on MIR Orbital StationThe process of heterogeneous combustion of most materials under zero-g without forced motion of air is practically impossible. However, ventilation is required to support astronauts' life and cool equipment. The presence of ventilation flows in station compartments at accidental ignition can cause a fire. An additional, but exceedingly important parameter of the fire risk of solid materials under zero-g is the minimum air gas velocity at which the extinction of materials occurs. Therefore, the conception of fire safety can be based on temporarily lowering the intensity of ventilation and even turning it off. The information on the limiting conditions of combustion under natural conditions is needed from both scientific and practical points of view. It will enable us to judge the reliability of results of ground-based investigations and develop a conception of fire safety of inhabited sealed compartments of space stations to by provided be means of nontraditional and highly-effective methods without both employing large quantities of fire-extinguishing compounds and hard restrictions on use of polymers. In this connection, an experimental installation was created to study the process of heterogeneous combustion of solid non-metals and to determine the conditions of its extinction under microgravity. This installation was delivered to the orbital station 'Mir' and the cosmonauts Viktorenko and Kondakova performed initial experiments on it in late 1994. The experimental installation consists of a combustion chamber with an electrical systems for ignition of samples, a device for cleaning air from combustion products, an air suction unit, air pipes and a control panel. The whole experiment is controlled by telemetry and recorded with two video cameras located at two different places. Besides the picture, parameters are recorded to determine the velocity of the air flow incoming to the samples, the time points of switching on/off the devices, etc. The combustion chamber temperature is also controlled. The main objectives of experiments of this series were as follows: (1) verification of the reliability of the installation in orbital flight; (2) verification of the experimental procedure; and (3) investigation of combustion of two types of materials under microgravity at various velocities of the incoming air flow.
Document ID
19960008416
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Egorov, S. D.
(Academy of Sciences (USSR) Moscow, Ussr)
Belayev, A. YU.
(Academy of Sciences (USSR) Moscow, Ussr)
Klimin, L. P.
(Academy of Sciences (USSR) Moscow, Ussr)
Voiteshonok, V. S.
(Academy of Sciences (USSR) Moscow, Ussr)
Ivanov, A. V.
(Academy of Sciences (USSR) Moscow, Ussr)
Semenov, A. V.
(Nauchno-Proizvodstvennoe Obedinenie Energomash Moscow, Russia)
Zaitsev, E. N.
(Nauchno-Proizvodstvennoe Obedinenie Energomash Moscow, Russia)
Balashov, E. V.
(Nauchno-Proizvodstvennoe Obedinenie Energomash Moscow, Russia)
Andreeva, T. V.
(Nauchno-Proizvodstvennoe Obedinenie Energomash Moscow, Russia)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Lewis Research Center, The 3rd International Microgravity Combustion Workshop
Subject Category
Materials Processing
Accession Number
96N15582
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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