Fixed Aerosol Fire Suppression System

Aerosol suppression shows new innovative features to increase safety level while also drive down costs. It doesn’t require any complex pipework, storage pressure, or even no bulky cylinder banks. Therefore, this system widely applying different sectors to save lives, wealth, health, and the environment. NFPA 2010 standard for Fixed Aerosol Fire Extinguishing system covered the full system guideline.

Fixed Aerosol Fire Suppression System with advantages

Aerosol fire extinguishes technology to create a combination of microparticles with gaseous matter to reduce the heat that energizes fire, actually aerosol affected area to hinder oxygen, fuel, and chain reaction as soon as possible; thus, fire can’t be dangerous. This fire preventing agent is in high demand in the market in comparison to others since only in America, numerous fire protection engineers recognize it for protecting special hazards. It is environmentally friendly, simple to install, no maintenance requires also cost effective. There are two types of method for applying this technology Condensed Aerosol, Dispersed Aerosol.

Which one is most effective?

Though aerosol is beneficial to pull up fires, condensed aerosol systems get more preference because they assume too small (<10 µm) but equally manure to different shaped generators, not pressurized systems. And it is remarkably potassium-based, including five times as effective as Halon.

Application and Uses

Aerosol suppression methods are equally useable to both total flooding and local application fire-suppression systems with much sustainability to fight against the fire classes A, B, C, E, and F. But for class C fires, the aerosol may bring some problematic issues under certain conditions to extinguish a burning jet of flammable gases without first shutting off its supply.
The application of aerosol firefighting systems widely used at the present time. Typically, potential fire hazards include Power stations, Ships, Welding machines, Electric cabinets, Electric equipment boxes or rooms, Cable trenches, Computer rooms, Ups systems, Engine Rooms of Vehicle, New Energy Battery Compartment, Small-sized precise instrument cabinets, Automobiles, Large vehicles