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Jie Ji

Researcher at University of Science and Technology of China

Publications -  98
Citations -  3651

Jie Ji is an academic researcher from University of Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoke & Stack effect. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 89 publications receiving 2670 citations. Previous affiliations of Jie Ji include Chinese People's Armed Police Force Academy.

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Experimental investigation on influence of different transverse fire locations on maximum smoke temperature under the tunnel ceiling

TL;DR: In this paper, a set of model scale experiments were carried out, to investigate the influence of different transverse fire locations on maximum smoke temperature under the tunnel ceiling, and the results showed that the restriction effect of the sidewalls of tunnels cause the maximum smoke temperatures under the ceiling to increase compared with the unconfined space, even fires occurs at the longitudinal centerline.
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Pyrolysis of Medium-Density Fiberboard: Optimized Search for Kinetics Scheme and Parameters via a Genetic Algorithm Driven by Kissinger’s Method

TL;DR: The pyrolysis kinetics of charring materials plays an important role in understanding material combustions especially for construction materials with complex degradation chemistry as mentioned in this paper, especially for composite materials.
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A study of the effect of plug-holing and boundary layer separation on natural ventilation with vertical shaft in urban road tunnel fires

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of vertical shaft height on natural ventilation in urban road tunnel fires was investigated, and two special phenomena, plug-holing and turbulent boundary-layer separation were observed, both of which will influence the impact of smoke exhaust.
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Experimental study of air entrainment mode with natural ventilation using shafts in road tunnel fires

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantificationally analyzed the effect of plug-holing on the smoke exhaust efficiency in road tunnel fires and found that about 2/3 of the smoke exhausting rate of the shaft is air.
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A numerical study on upstream maximum temperature in inclined urban road tunnel fires

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the smoke behaviors induced by fires in inclined tunnels with different slopes and the upstream maximum temperatures along the tunnel centerline were specifically focused, showing that the longitudinal centerline peak temperature occurs at the downstream region of fire source rather than right above the fire source.