firelags
Firelags is a term used in the discipline of combustion science to describe the time lag between an applied heat source and the observable propagation of a flame within a combustible medium. The concept functions as a descriptor of dynamic response in systems where ignition timing, heat release, and geometry interact to influence flame development. In practice, firelags are treated as a time delay parameter that partially decouples ignition chemistry from flame spread in simplified models.
Origin and usage: The term emerged in discussions of transient combustion where rapid ignition does not immediately
Measurement and interpretation: Firelags are quantified by measuring the interval between an ignition cue (for example,
Applications and limitations: Firelags inform safety design, such as timing of suppression systems or venting strategies,
See also: ignition delay, flame front, heat release rate, combustion modeling.