"I throw more power into my voice, and now the flame is extinguished," wrote Irish scientist John Tyndall about his experiments with sound and fire in 1857. Countless public demonstrations and a handful of lab tests later, researchers are still struggling to determine exactly how sound can extinguish flames. Sound travels in waves, which are simply variations of pressure in a medium—whether solid, liquid or gas. The energy from vibrating objects, such as speaker membranes, moves from particle to particle in the air in a repeating pattern of high- and low-pressure zones that we perceive as sound. According to the ideal gas law, temperature, pressure and volume are related; therefore, a decrease in pressure can lead to a corresponding decrease in temperature, which may explain how sound can extinguish a flame.
Skeptical? This is obviously a very small example of this concept, but just think... this may be a way to subsidize your fire department. The speaker size alone will be enough to handle most smaller concerts...
The video I was looking for, and this goes back several years, showed a glass enclosed room with tires that were ignited using diesel fuel. The smoke production as you can imagine was intense, quickly filling the test chamber. When sound waves were introduced, you could see the smoke literally 'clump' together, falling to the floor as a solid material, and the fire went out...
This could be a glimpse into how firefighting may be handled in the future. Don't think this is to far off... Have you ever heard of a company responding to a structure fire, tenting the structure as if it had termites and injecting the structure with ozone? Sounds kind of hazmat like maybe?
Ozone works to COMPLETELY remove any smell of smoke from the structure, furniture, everything. This practice is common in europe but yet does not even exist here in the states.
Technology is out there, but are you willing to adapt to new ways of doing business?
Remember the real reason why dinosaurs became extinct... Don't be a dinosaur... Science and technology have proven why smoking is not a good thing, but yet we continue to ignore the warnings... We really need to learn from others if we want to move forward. This includes being aware of the obvious and in some cases, the not so obvious, like sound waves being used to extinguish fire.
TCSS,
CBz
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