The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) Next Generation Fire Suppression Program (NGP) was born of necessity. Atmospheric science
had made it clear that fully halogenated compounds containing chlorine or bromine posed a threat to the earth’s ozone layer.
An extensive, multi-year search by the DoD found that the best commercially available alternative to halon 1301, CF
3Br, for fire suppression in aircraft carried significant weight and storage volume penalties. In 1997, the NGP began, with
an objective that evolved to “develop and demonstrate technology for economically feasible, environmentally acceptable and
user-safe processes, techniques, and fluids that meet the operational requirements currently satisfied by halon 1301 systems
in aircraft.” Ten years later, the NGP has revitalized the science of fire suppression. There have been advances in delivery
of a flame extinguishing chemical to a fire, knowledge of chemical interactions with flames (and limitations to the effectiveness
of such chemicals), screening of a large number of chemicals as potential fire suppressants, identification of the properties
of fluids that make for effective and safe fire suppression, identification of effective fire suppressant chemicals, engineering
of non-fluid suppression systems for improved effectiveness and efficiency, and evaluation of the true cost of a new fire
suppression system. The final report of the NGP will be available in book form and on CD this autumn. See the NGP web site
(
http://www.bfrl.nist.gov/866/NGP) for ordering information.
Keywords aircraft - aircraft fires - fire - fire suppression - fire research - flame suppression - halon