It looks like this chair could use some flame retardant. |
What makes something fireproof?
Why do some things burn easily and others don't?
By Dani Leviss - Live Science Contributor
On Dec. 30, 1903, a spark from a stage light set Chicago's
Iroquois Theatre ablaze.
"The stage and the curtain and
the rest caught fire," said Bill Carroll, grandson of the theatre's co-owner and
adjunct professor of chemistry at Indiana University Bloomington.
"There were insufficient exits, and it was terrible."
Over 600 people died in the disaster — the deadliest
single-building fire in U.S. history.
Nowadays, this probably wouldn't happen, because many modern
materials are less combustible than they used to be.
But what makes certain materials fireproof?
The term "fireproof" is actually a misnomer, because
almost anything containing carbon, if hot enough, can combust and catch fire.
"Fire resistant" and "flame retardant" are
more accurate terms, Carroll told Live Science.
When used properly, these fire protective measures can interrupt
the burning process.
For instance, typical plastic is combustible because it has a
lot of carbon and hydrogen available to fuel a fire.
Gasoline also has carbon and hydrogen available — and it's
volatile, so gasoline can evaporate easily, making it highly combustible.
In contrast, a fire resistant material is one that doesn't burn
easily.
One example of this is the artificial stone used in kitchen
countertops, like the DuPont brand Corian.
The plastic of a Corian countertop is filled with finely ground
rocks made of hydrated aluminum oxide, a chemical compound that doesn't burn.
These rocks lower the fuel value (the amount of carbon available
for combustion) of the countertop, making it more fire resistant, Carroll said.
"The aluminum oxide brought
water with it, so when you compounded the two together [the plastic and
hydrated aluminum oxide], what you in essence had was rocks that on a
microscopic basis were wet," he said.
"And you had them in a plastic
matrix, so it was really, really hard to get any heat generated from
this."
Although the rock attracts and holds water molecules, it does
not get wet enough to form a puddle.
Water keeps the countertop cool and helps block heat from
getting any fuel.
If there were a heat source (for instance, a lit cigarette resting
on a Corian countertop), it would need to boil away the water surrounding the
aluminum oxide first in order to then heat up the fuel, or the plastic
molecules, enough to burn.
Moreover, countertops like Corian don't have much plastic —
there's just enough to hold the rock together, Carroll said.
Fuel and heat are two sides of the fire tetrahedron, a
triangular pyramid in which each side represents the elements necessary for
fire.
The other two sides are oxygen and a sustainable chemical
reaction, Carroll explained.
Most materials — aside from granite and asbestos, which are among the rare materials that are actually, literally fireproof — can be made more or less combustible only by eliminating one or more sides of the fire tetrahedron, he said.
The fire tetrahedron includes heat, fuel, oxygen and a sustainable chain reaction. |
Unlike fire resistance — the properties that make it hard for a fire to either start in the first place or keep going — chemicals known as flame retardants can help to slow or extinguish an already-burning fire.
Chemical flame retardants contain chlorine, bromine, nitrogen,
phosphorus, boron or metals.
One way flame retardants work is through the formation of a substance
known as char foam.
When a piece of toast burns, for example, a char forms on the
outside, which insulates the undamaged bread on the inside.
Once a fire starts on an object treated with a char
foam-inducing flame retardant, a chemical reaction within the retardant bubbles
up to create a rigid, inflammable foam out of the char from the initial
burning.
This char foam then insulates the
fuel from oxygen and, to some extent, heat, Carroll said. "[The char]
kind of builds its own cocoon."
Flame retardant use has mushroomed since the 1970s, but it has
sparked a controversy over the past few decades because of its potential toxicity.
Brominated fire retardant chemicals, banned in the U.S. since
2004, worked well at putting out fires, but weren't permanently bound to the
material, for example a mattress, Carroll said.
That meant the chemical could potentially leave the mattress and
end up in the dust or air, where it could be inhaled or ingested.
That's cause for concern, because these chemicals are linked to a slew of health problems; for instance they might disrupt thyroid function, interrupt the immune system and increase cancer risk, according to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
"New strategies for making fire
retardants [are] to either bind the chemical to the mattress or make it another
polymer [a long, repeating molecule chain], another absolutely huge molecule
that doesn't migrate," he told Live Science.
In contrast, brominated fire retardants are smaller molecules
that can easily leave materials and objects.
Can fire resistant materials and flame retardants be relied upon
for fire safety?
They do work well, but think of them as the second line of
defense, Carroll said.
Although it may seem like rather simple advice, keep fire, such
as candles, out of bedrooms and carefully tend to stoves and other fire sources
in the kitchen.
"Don't have a fire where you don't want a fire in the first place," he said.
Dani
Leviss
Live
Science Contributor
Dani
Leviss is a freelance science writer who covers water, animals, art, chemistry
and technology. She has written for Scholastic, Hakai Magazine, IEEE Earthzine
and News-O-Matic. Born and raised in New Jersey, Dani studied chemistry by day
and edited the student newspaper at Drew University by night. She completed her
master's degree in science journalism at NYU. When not writing, you'll find
Dani walking her dog, painting or gardening.
https://www.livescience.com/how-fireproofing-works.html
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