I am delighted to announce that our peat fire paper has
received the 2013 Distinguished Paper Award on Fire Research at the 34th
International Symposium on Combustion. This research award is given biannually
by the Combustion Institute.
The work studies the chemistry of smouldering
combustion of peat. Peat fires,
like those causing haze episodes in South East Asia, are the largest fires on
Earth but a poorly understood, yet extensive source of greenhouse gases, and
are emerging as a hot topic in climate-change mitigation. These novel
combustion experiments provide the framework to study smouldering dynamics by
carefully varying the controlling mechanisms and providing burning conditions
that otherwise cannot be obtained.This multidisciplinary paper merges the fields of combustion
and geoscience, and serves as an example of mechanical engineering contributing
to understand Earth-science disciplines like ecology, biodiversity, and
biogeochemistry.
No comments:
Post a Comment