Fire behavior

 

– Definition of fire, oxidation, theories related to fire, and address some related
definition to fire.
– Fire behavior triangle and its components.
– Fire stages (Five or more different stage) and heat transfer methods.
– Fire severity, fire intensity, fire spread, fire types, and fire regimes.
– The impact of changing the circumstances on fire behavior.
– Include some fire related equations.
– Compare and contrast different fire scenarios.- References: at the end of research paper, 15-20 references.

 

Sample Solution

Fire behavior

The behavior of the fire often depends on the fuel. Fire is the rapid oxidation of a material in the exothermic chemical process of combustion, releasing heat, light, and various reaction productions. Fire behaves differently. Some burn slowly and evenly; others are extremely hot, burning fiercely and quickly. The fire triangle, also known as the combustion triangle, is a simple model for understanding the chemical reaction which must occur to create fire. It is composed of three elements, fuel, heat and oxygen, which must be all be present for a fire to ignite. Stages of a fire include: incipient, growth, fully developed, and decay. A fire spreads by transferring heat energy in three ways: radiation, convection, and conduction.

The Ugandan case, unfortunately, has not been as remarkable. There exists a severe shortage of practitioners, especially in rural areas. Even though unemployment in the sector persists, professionals find these positions unattractive due to their conditions. During the period of 2010-2015, on average, 9% of these practitioners migrated out of Uganda (Omaswa et. Al.,4). More pressing is the fact that 89% of the migrants are young professionals under the age of 40. Over the course of the study, 192 professionals migrated, while only 71 returned to work or after studying abroad. These numbers could be especially worrying, and indicative of the lack of retention incentive in the country (Omaswa et. Al.,4).

Educated individuals are attracted to efficient and modern working conditions, in areas with progressive institutions and infrastructure. The absence of these exacerbates the problems associated with brain drain. Not only are less people immigrating to these countries, but their top talent is leaving with no incentive to come back.

The second area of impact is remittances —the sums of money, compensation and transfers that migrants send back to their families in their home countries. They form a large portion of the economic benefits offered by emigration. In 2017 alone, migrants had sent $466 billion back to their origin countries as remittances (World Bank). However, whether these remittances actually contribute to economic growth or not, is a separate matter altogether.

On international platforms, concerns have been raised regarding the viability of remittances as an alternative to employment within the country itself. Some argue, that even if migrants had chosen to stay back, they would be able to work and earn. This argument lays on an unsteady premise. In claiming so, we would have to assume that there are equal and sufficient opportunities present in the home countries of these migrants— the very la

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