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Search Publications by: Richard D. Peacock (Assoc)

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Displaying 226 - 250 of 358

Sublethal Effects of Smoke on Survival and Health

March 26, 2001
Author(s)
Richard G. Gann, Jason D. Averill, Kathryn M. Butler, Walter W. Jones, George W. Mulholland, J L. Neviaser, Thomas J. Ohlemiller, Richard D. Peacock, Paul A. Reneke, J R. Hall

A User's Guide for FAST: Engineering Tools for Estimating Fire Growth and Smoke Transport

January 3, 2000
Author(s)
Richard D. Peacock, Paul A. Reneke, Walter W. Jones, Richard W. Bukowski, Glenn P. Forney
FAST is a collection of fire modeling tools which uses the underlying fire model CFAST and adds the routines of FIREFORM to provide engineering calculations of fire phenomena in compartmented structures. This manual provides documentation and examples for

Development of a Hazard-Based Method for Evaluating the Fire Safety of Passenger Trains

June 29, 1999
Author(s)
Richard W. Bukowski, Richard D. Peacock, Paul A. Reneke, Jason D. Averill, S. H. Markos
The fire safety of U.S. passenger rail trains currently is addressed through small-scale flammability and smoke emission tests and performance criteria promulgated by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). The FRA approach relies heavily on test

Defining Flashover for Fire Hazard Calculations

June 1, 1999
Author(s)
Richard D. Peacock, Paul A. Reneke, Richard W. Bukowski, Vyto Babrauskas
As the use of performance-based methods for evaluating the fire behavior of materials and systems becomes more widespread, objective criteria to judge fire behavior become more important. This paper reviews techniques for predicting the most common of

Evaluation of Passenger Train Car Materials in the Cone Calorimeter

February 23, 1999
Author(s)
Richard D. Peacock, Richard W. Bukowski, S. H. Markos
Recent advances in fire test methods and hazard analysis techniques make it useful to re-examine passenger train fire safety requirements. The use of test methods based on heat release rate (HRR), incorporated with fire modeling and hazard analysis, could

Evaluation of Passenger Train Car Materials in the Cone Calorimeter

February 23, 1999
Author(s)
Richard D. Peacock, Richard W. Bukowski, S. H. Markos
Recent advances in fire test methods and hazard analysis techniques make it useful to re-examine passenger train fire safety requirements. The use of test methods based on heat release rate (HRR), incorporated with fire modeling and hazard analysis, could

Quantifying Fire Model Evaluation Using Functional Analysis

January 1, 1999
Author(s)
Richard D. Peacock, Paul A. Reneke, William D. Davis, Walter W. Jones
Comparisons of predictive fire models with each other or with experimental data have been largely qualitative. By treating these time series curves as infinite-dimensional vectors, a branch of mathematics called functional analysis defines geometrically

Sensitivity Examination of the airEXODUS Aircraft Evacuation Simulation Model

November 16, 1998
Author(s)
Richard W. Bukowski, Richard D. Peacock, Walter W. Jones
The Building and Fire Research Laboratory at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been a leader in the development, application and evaluation of models for the simulation of fires and the associated hazards and risk to people