巨大ファイアトルネードが海洋油流出除去を効率化(The giant fire tornado that could save our oceans)

2026-02-16 テキサスA&M大学

米テキサスA&M大学の研究チームは、海洋油流出事故への新対策として巨大な「火炎旋風(ファイア・ウィール)」を活用する技術を実証した。従来の原油の現場燃焼は黒煙や有害すすの大量発生が課題だったが、特殊な三壁構造装置で人工的に火炎旋風を発生させることで、燃焼効率を大幅に向上。油の燃焼率は最大95%に達し、すす排出も約40%削減された。強い上昇気流が酸素供給を促し高温燃焼を実現するためとみられる。研究は米安全・環境保全局(BSEE)の支援を受けて進められ、迅速かつ環境負荷の低い油回収法として実用化が期待される一方、風や油膜条件など制御面での追加研究が必要とされる。

巨大ファイアトルネードが海洋油流出除去を効率化(The giant fire tornado that could save our oceans)
The research team engineered a setup of three 16-foot-tall walls placed in a triangular pattern, to twist airflow around an ignited crude-oil-coated pool of water. The result: a nearly 17-foot-tall fire tornado that burned oil spills faster and cleaner than fire pools.Credit: Dr. Elaine Oran/Texas A&M University College of Engineering

<関連情報>

火の渦による現場燃焼の促進に関する大規模フィールド実験 Large-scale field experiments on enhancing In-Situ burning with fire whirls

Wuquan Cui, Joseph L. Dowling, Mohammadhadi Hajilou, Mitchell Huffman, Bhushan Pawar, Johanna Aurell, Qingsheng Wang, Elaine Oran, Karen N. Stone, Michael J. Gollner
Fuel  Available online: 30 June 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2025.136093

Highlights

  • Fire whirls doubled flame heights and increased burning rates by 40% versus pool fires.
  • Fire whirls reduced particulate matter emissions by 40% compared to traditional pool fires.
  • Wind conditions and configuration sizing critically affect fire whirl stability and efficiency.
  • Boilover phenomena influence premature extinguishment in large-scale fire whirl burns.
  • This study represents one of the largest controlled fire whirl experiments to date.

Abstract

Fire whirls, a combustion-intensifying phenomenon, offer potential for cleaner, more efficient burns with reduced emissions in environmental applications like oil spill remediation. While most knowledge of fire whirls stems from laboratory-scale experiments, and only a limited subset of these experiments has captured emissions, this study addresses a critical research gap by conducting one of the largest controlled fire whirl experiments to date, focusing on enhancing in-situ burning. Using a 1.5-meter diameter crude oil pool with 15 mm and 40 mm slick thicknesses on an open water surface, fire whirls were successfully generated within a 5-meter-tall three-wall structure under the influence of various wind conditions. Measurements of flame geometry, flow velocity, temperature profiles, heat flux, mass consumption, and emissions were compared to pool fires. Results revealed that fire whirls, with mean flame heights nearly double those of pool fires, increased burning rates by 40 % and reduced soot emissions by 40 %. The highest fuel consumption efficiency of 95 % was achieved in a 15 mm slick thickness fire whirl experiment, while in other fire whirl experiments, especially those with 40 mm slick thickness, premature extinguishment was observed lowering ultimate fuel consumption efficiencies. Enhanced performance compared to traditional pool fires suggests that fire whirls might be more effective for in-situ burning, however this efficiency is currently only achieved under calm ambient conditions. This study discusses the potential interactive effects of ambient conditions, configuration sizing, and boilover phenomenon on fire whirl dynamics, highlighting the need of continued research across scales to optimize configurations and mitigate detrimental emissions, thereby enhancing the efficacy of in-situ burning in large-scale oil spill scenarios.

1103廃棄物管理
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