Learn more about ongoing laboratory research into backing fire spread – a subject largely overlooked compared to heading fires, yet at any instant, it represents approximately ½ the active perimeter of a wildland fire. This research explores whether flame spread on individual fuel particles can be upscaled to behaviors seen in fuel beds.
Experiments using individual fuel particles have so-far revealed: 1) backing spread is highly sensitive to local wind speed, 2) unlike heading spread, particle spread depends upon a little-recognized mm-scale heat transfer mechanism called “gas-phase conduction”, 3) flame spread rate on particles varies with wind direction as a polar elliptical function, being the same without wind as at 90°, 4) external radiant heat flux greatly enhances spread rates on particles and is readily incorporated into an empirical spread model, even though it is insufficient alone for particle ignition. Experiments show that flame spread through simple cardboard fuel beds is well approximated as a sequence of single particle behaviors, but new techniques will be required to understand what, if any, statistical method could scale particle behavior to the complexity of real fuel beds.
This event is part of a series:
Fire Lab Seminar Series
The Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory has been hosting an annual seminar series since 1998. Hour-long seminars are presented by Fire Lab employees and other researchers from throughout the world. Seminars cover current research and management about the natural world from a broad range of disciplines, but most seminars usually have a wildland fire theme. The Fire Lab Seminar Series provides a platform for researchers and managers to present their work in an environment that encourages critical thought, the free exchange of ideas, and knowledge discovery. For more information, visit the Fire Lab Seminar Series page.
Event Details
Feb 5 2026, 11am - 12pm Mountain Time