Introduction

Firefighting foam systems are one of the most effective solutions for protecting facilities where flammable or combustible liquids are present. Industries such as oil and gas, petrochemical, fuel storage, and logistics terminals require systems capable of controlling Class B fires, where water alone is insufficient.

The National Fire Protection Association establishes in NFPA 11 the criteria for the design, installation, and operation of low-, medium-, and high-expansion foam systems.

Operating Principle

Firefighting foam is generated by mixing water, foam concentrate, and air. This mixture produces a blanket of bubbles that performs three main functions:

• suppresses the fire by isolating oxygen
• cools the fuel surface
• prevents the release of flammable vapors

Main System Components

A typical system includes:
• foam concentrate storage tank
• proportioning system or premix system
• piping network
• control valves
• discharge devices (nozzles or foam chambers)
• detection and activation system

In modern facilities, system activation is typically integrated with fire and gas detectors connected to control panels.

Design Criteria

System design depends on several factors:

a) Type of hazard
• hydrocarbon storage
• process areas
• containment dikes
• loading areas

b) Type of foam (most commonly used)
• AFFF (Aqueous Film Forming Foam)
• AR-AFFF (Alcohol-Resistant AFFF)
• FP/FFFP (Fluoroprotein / Film-Forming Fluoroprotein)

c) Application considerations

Firefighting foam is primarily classified by its expansion ratio (low, medium, or high) and concentration (1%, 3%, 6%), rather than by physical density, since its function is to cover or flood combustible surfaces.

The most common types based on expansion include:

Low expansion (<20:1): Highly mobile, ideal for flammable liquid fires (AFFF, FP), covering large surfaces quickly.

Medium expansion (20:1 – 200:1): Used for indoor applications and vapor control.

High expansion (200:1 – 1000:1): Designed for total flooding of enclosed spaces such as hangars, suppressing fire with dry foam bubbles.

Typical Concentrations

• 3%: Three parts concentrate to 97 parts water, commonly used for hydrocarbons
• 6%: Six parts concentrate to 94 parts water, frequently used for polar solvents
• 1%: Used in specialized concentrates for hydrocarbons

For low-expansion foam, typical values are:

d) Hydraulic Considerations

The system must ensure:
• minimum pressure at discharge devices
• required flow rate
• minimum discharge duration

Hydraulic calculations must consider:
• friction losses
• elevation
• nozzle discharge coefficients

Conclusion

Properly designed foam systems allow fire control at early stages, reduce damage to facilities, and protect personnel safety. The rigorous application of NFPA standards ensures adequate system performance under critical conditions.

References

• NFPA 11
• NOM-006-ASEA-2017

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