How to Calculate Heat Release Rate

Heat Release Rate (HRR) Calculator

Calculation Results:

Total Heat Release Rate: 0 kW

Total Heat Release Rate: 0 MW

function calculateHRR() { var m = parseFloat(document.getElementById("massLossRate").value); var hc = parseFloat(document.getElementById("heatCombustion").value); var eff = parseFloat(document.getElementById("combustionEfficiency").value); if (isNaN(m) || isNaN(hc) || isNaN(eff)) { alert("Please enter valid numerical values for all fields."); return; } // Formula: HRR = m_dot * Delta_Hc * chi // m is kg/s // hc is MJ/kg // result is in MW var resultMW = m * hc * eff; var resultKW = resultMW * 1000; document.getElementById("resKW").innerText = resultKW.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 2, maximumFractionDigits: 2}); document.getElementById("resMW").innerText = resultMW.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 4, maximumFractionDigits: 4}); document.getElementById("hrr-result-box").style.display = "block"; }

Understanding Heat Release Rate (HRR)

In fire safety engineering and fire science, the Heat Release Rate (HRR) is arguably the most critical parameter. It defines the "size" of a fire by measuring the rate at which thermal energy is generated by the combustion process. High HRR values indicate a fire that spreads rapidly and creates hazardous conditions quickly.

The Fundamental Formula

To calculate the heat release rate of a burning material, we use the mass loss rate and the effective heat of combustion. The formula is expressed as:

HRR = ṁ × ΔHc,eff × χ
  • ṁ (Mass Loss Rate): The rate at which the fuel is losing mass as it turns into gas/vapors (measured in kg/s).
  • ΔHc (Heat of Combustion): The amount of energy released per unit mass of the fuel burned (measured in MJ/kg).
  • χ (Efficiency): A combustion efficiency factor (dimensionless, 0 to 1) that accounts for incomplete combustion, especially in ventilation-controlled environments.

Typical Heat of Combustion Values

Different materials release different amounts of energy. Here are some common reference values used in fire modeling:

Material Approx. ΔHc (MJ/kg)
Wood (Cellulose) 12 – 15
Polyurethane Foam 23 – 30
Gasoline / Heptane 44 – 45
Polystyrene 39 – 40

Practical Example

Imagine a piece of upholstered furniture burning where the mass loss rate is measured at 0.04 kg/s. If the material (polyurethane foam) has an effective heat of combustion of 25 MJ/kg and we assume an efficiency of 0.7 (70%):

Calculation:
HRR = 0.04 kg/s × 25 MJ/kg × 0.7
HRR = 0.7 MW = 700 kW

A typical wastebasket fire reaches about 50 kW, while a fully involved sofa can reach 2,000 kW to 3,000 kW (2-3 MW). Understanding these values helps fire safety officers design adequate sprinkler systems and evacuation routes.

Why is HRR Important?

Calculating HRR is essential for determining:

  • Time to Flashover: The point where all combustible surfaces in a room ignite.
  • Smoke Production: Higher HRR typically correlates with higher smoke and toxic gas production.
  • Structural Integrity: Engineers use HRR to estimate the heat flux reaching steel beams or walls to prevent collapse.

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