Fire Prevention and Response Flashcards

1
Q

3 kinds of fires and their causes

A

fire triggered by natural hazards
fire triggered by human made conditions
fire due to mismanagement

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2
Q

Example of Fire triggered by natural hazards

A

earthquake, volcanic eruption etc

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3
Q

Example of Fire triggered by human-made conditions

A

faulty electrical, connections

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4
Q

Example of Fire due to mismanagement

A

irresponsible handling of fire and negligence.

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5
Q

Four things must be present at the same time in order to produce fire:

A

Fuel
Heat
Oxygen
Chemical reaction

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6
Q

is a four-sided geometric representation of the four factors necessary for fire: fuel (any substance that can undergo combustion), heat (heat energy sufficient to release vapor from the fuel and cause ignition), oxidizing agent (air containing oxygen), and uninhibited chemical chain reaction (sufficient exothermic reaction energy to produce ignition).

A

Fire Tetrahedron

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7
Q

is rapid oxidation at very high temperature.

A

fire combustion

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8
Q

3 classes of fire

A

class a
class b
class c

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9
Q

fires involving solid materials such as wood, paper or textiles.

A

class a

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10
Q

fires involving flammable liquids such as petrol, diesel or oils.

A

class b

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11
Q

fires involving gases.

A

class c

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12
Q

4 stages of fire

A
  1. incipient
  2. growth
  3. fully developed
  4. decay
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13
Q

This first stage begins when heat, oxygen and a fuel source combine and have a chemical reaction resulting in fire. This is also known as “ignition” and is usually represented by a very small fire which often (and hopefully) goes out on its own, before the following stages are reached. Recognizing a fire in this stage provides your best chance at suppression or escape.

A

incipient

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14
Q

is where the structures fire load and oxygen are used as fuel for the fire. There are numerous factors affecting the growth stage including where the fire started, what combustibles are near it, ceiling height and the potential for “thermal layering”. It is during this shortest of the 4 stages when a deadly “flashover” can occur; potentially trapping, injuring or killing firefighters.

A

Growth

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15
Q

When the growth stage has reached its max and all combustible materials have been ignited, a fire is considered fully developed. This is the hottest phase of a fire and the most dangerous for anybody trapped within.

A

Fully Developed

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16
Q

Usually the longest stage of a fire, the decay stage is characterized a significant decrease in oxygen or fuel, putting an end to the fire. Two common dangers during this stage are first – the existence of non-flaming combustibles, which can potentially start a new fire if not fully extinguished. Second, there is the danger of a backdraft when oxygen is reintroduced to a volatile, confined space.

A

Decay