Σε μια δασική πυρκαγιά οι 500 είναι μια πολύ συνηθισμένη θερμοκρασία.
Δες το παρακάτω απλά ως γενική πληροφορία. Για τα υπόλοιπα οπως σου είπα δεν εχω εξειδικευμένες γνώσεις.
For forest fires, the average temperature of the flame burning of tree crowns is 1100 °C [
2,
3,
4]. At the tree base, the temperature can reach 200 to 500 °C [
2,
3,
4]. Therefore, the most relevant range of studied temperatures of intensive evaporation of fire extinguishing agents is 200–1100 °C. At temperatures above 600 °C, inhomogeneous liquid droplets (especially water-containing emulsions and suspensions) are characterized by the effects of intensive dispersion (in puffing or micro-explosion modes) [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11]. Therefore, it is difficult to assess the differences in their evaporation rates under such conditions. Thus, as the first approximation, it is advisable to study the evaporation characteristics of fire-extinguishing water-containing compositions in the temperature range up to 600 °C.