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The fire triangle.
The fire triangle or combustion triangle is a simple model, from the science of firefighting, for understanding the ingredients necessary for most fires. It has largely been replaced in the industry by the fire tetrahedron, which provides a more complete model, also described below.
The triangle illustrates the rule that in order to ignite and burn, a fire requires three elements: heat, fuel, and an oxidizing agent, usually oxygen. The fire is prevented or extinguished by removing any one of them. A fire naturally occurs when the elements are combined in the right mixture (e.g., more heat is needed for igniting some fuels, unless there is concentrated oxygen).
The fire tetrahedron.
The fire triangle is a useful teaching tool, but fails to identify the fourth essential element of fire: the sustaining chemical reaction. This has led to development of the fire tetrahedron: a triangular pyramid having four sides (including the bottom). Some fire suppression agents do not remove or reduce any of the three necessary components, but rather interfere with their chemical combination, such as Halon. In most fires, it does not matter which element gets removed; the fire fails to ignite, or it goes out. However, there are certain chemical fires where knowing only the “fire triangle” is not good enough.
Combustion is the chemical reaction that feeds a fire more heat and allows it to continue. With most types of fires, the old fire triangle model works well enough, but when the fire involves burning metals (known as a class-D fire in the American system of fire classifications, involving metals like lithium, magnesium, etc.), it becomes useful to consider the chemistry of combustion. Putting water on such a fire could result in the fire getting hotter (or even exploding) because such metals can react with water in an exothermic reaction to produce flammable hydrogen gas. Therefore, other specialized chemicals must typically be used to break the chain reaction of metallic combustion and stop the fire.
The fire square is a model created by fire ecologist Richard W. Halsey. It shows how catastrophic wild fires, like the 2003 Cedar Fire, are formed. It includes the three original elements from the Fire Triangle, but adds an extra side, showing Extreme Weather as another important element. Some examples of extreme weather would be El Niño, hot [Santa Ana Winds], or a long drought; excessive vegetation growth can be contributory too. A wildfire can only be caused if one of these are present at the time. During the Cedar Fire, Santa Ana winds were the cause of much of the fire\'s progress and re-kindling. The fire square was shown on an edition of \'The Weather Show\'
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