Material description

Material ID: ACP07

Material type: Aluminium composite panel with a core consisting of polyethylene (PE) and an inorganic filler.

Polymer: Polyethylene (78%)

Additives (fire retardants, fillers or traces of inorganic elements): Calcium Carbonate (19%), Chlorine (1%), Titanium (1%), traces of other elements (<1%)

Core thickness: 3.18mm

Thickness of single metal skin: 0.5mm

Table 1. Estimated mass concentration of compounds.

CompoundMass Concentration (%)
Polyethylene (PE)78
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3)19
Chlorine (Cl)1
Titanium (Ti)1
Traces of barium (Ba)<1
Traces of silicon (Si)<1
Traces of iron (Fe)<1
Traces of aluminium (Al)<1
Traces of magnesium (Mg)<1
Traces of potassium (K)<1

A. Material composition identification

A.1 Attenuated total reflection – Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR)

Table 2. FTIR compound identification.
Identified Compounds
Polyethylene (PE)
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3)

Figure 1 . FTIR spectra: Absorbance percentage versus wavenumber from the sample.

Figure 2. FTIR spectra: Absorbance percentage versus wavenumber from the sample and the identified compounds.

 

A.2 Energy Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence (EDXRF)

Table 2. Inorganic elements and their mass concentration identified with EDXRF.

ElementMass Concentration (%)
Ca10
Ti1
Cl1
Ba1
Si1
Fe<1
S<1
Al<1
Mg<1
K<1

Figure 3. EDXRF spectra. Counts vs energy. Identified elements are shown as vertical lines.

 

B. Thermogravimetric analysis

Table 3. Mass fraction of residue after thermal decomposition.

ConditionFraction of mass residue at 800°C
Non-oxidative (nitrogen)0.07
Oxidative (air)0.07

Table 4. Temperature and amplitude of main peaks in non-oxidative conditions.

Peak IDTemperature peak (°C)Amplitude of peak (°C-1)
Peak 14832.17 x 10-2
Peak 26725.2 x 10-4

Table 5. Temperature and amplitude of main peaks in oxidative conditions.

Peak IDTemperature peak (°C)Amplitude of peak (°C-1)
Peak 13793.18 x 10-3
Peak 24309.61 x 10-3
Peak 34691.274 x 10-2

Figure 4. Normalised mass (solid line) and derivative of the normalised mass (dashed line) in 150 ml min-1 of nitrogen and a heating rate of 20°C min-1.

Figure 5. Normalised mass (solid line) and derivative of the normalised mass (dashed line) in 150 ml min-1 of air and a heating rate of 20°C min-1 .

C. Gross Heat of Combustion

Table 7. Gross Heat of Combustion individual results for sample.
TrialΔHc [kJ g-1]
Trial 141.18
Trial 240.77
Trial 340.93
Average40.96
Std dev0.21

D. Ignition parameters

Table 8. Summary of ignition parameters for sample.
Critical heat flux for ignitionIgnition temperatureTotal heat transfer coefficient of lossesApparent thermal inertia
q̇″cr [kW m−2]Tig [°C]hr [W m-2 K-1]kρc [kW2 m-4 K-2 s]
13.70353370.535

Figure 6. Time-to-ignition vs incident radiant heat flux for samples.

 

E. Burning behaviour

Table 9. Summary of key burning behaviour metrics.

Heat fluxTestTime to ignitionFraction of mass residuePeak heat release rateTotal energy released
q̇″inc [kW m-2] tig [s]mres [-]q̇″p [kW m-2]Qt [MJ m-2]
35 kW m-2
Test 193-392.9894.98
Test 2360.01422.3088.90
Avg640407.6491.94
50 kW m-2
Test 1260493.4289.30
Test 2260.02592.71120
Avg260.01543.06104.65
60 kW m-2
Test 1140.08811.06123.41
Test 2130.01804.08128.72
Avg140.05807.57126.06
80 kW m-2
Test 1----
Test 2----
Avg----

 

Figure 7. Normalised mass loss over time for samples tested with 35, 50, 60 and 80 kW m-2.

Figure 8. Heat release rate per unit area over time for samples tested with 35, 50, 60 and 80 kW m-2.

 

Table 10. Effective Heat of Combustion individual results for sample.
TestΔHc [kJ g-1]
35 kW m-2 (Test 1)35.95
35 kW m-2 (Test 2)33.09
50 kW m-2 (Test 1)32.87
50 kW m-2 (Test 2)47.89
60 kW m-2 (Test 1)49.58
60 kW m-2 (Test 2)48.41
80 kW m-2 (Test 1)-
80 kW m-2 (Test 2)-
Average41.30
Std dev8.12

F. Flame Spread

Table 11. Minimum heat flux for flame spread rate and minimum flame spread rate for sample.
Orientationq̇″min.spread [kW m-2]Vf.min [mm s-1]
Horizontal30.50
Vertical32.30

Figure 9. Lateral flame spread rate versus heat flux.

Figure 10. Vertical flame spread rate versus heat flux.

Figure 11. Vf-1/2 as function of q̇″ext in horizontal configuration.

Figure 12. Vf-1/2 as function of q̇″ext in vertical configuration.

Table 12. Flame spread parameter results for sample.

OrientationTrial(kρcpΦh2)12 [m32 s12 kW-1]Φ [kW2 m-3]
Horizontal17.0477.88
Horizontal27.886.30
Vertical11.403198.86
Vertical21.752127.53