Friday 4 October 2013

Classification of fire

For identification, fire are classified according to their properties, which relate to the nature of fuel. The properties of fuel directly corresponds to best means of combating a fire. Without a source of fuel there is no fire hazard, but almost everything in an environment could be a fuel. Fuels occur as solids, liquids, vapors and gases.
Fire can be classified as following


Class A fires: Fuel is solid materials such as wood, plastic, textiles and their products: paper, housing, clothing etc. Solid fuels includes wood, building and synthetics used in furniture.
Class B fires: Fuel is in the form of flammable liquids and gases. Flammable liquids have a flash point below 100 oF.
Class C fires: Fires that are caused due to electricity as burning, natural and generated electricity play a large role in causing fire. Electrical lines and equipment can cause fires either by short circuiting or by resistances generating heat.
Class D fires: Fire that is caused due to combustible, easily oxidized metals such as aluminum, magnesium, titanium, and zirconium is categorized as “class D fire”.
Special Categories: This type of fire is caused due to extremely active oxidizers or mixtures, flammables containing oxygen, nitric acid, hydrogen peroxide, and solid missile propellants

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