The Fire Behaviour of Fabrics Containing Dried Emollient Residues

Date

2025-03-29

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

A significant number of UK fire fatalities have been reported to involve textiles contaminated with emollients. In the following study, the flammability of a variety of fabrics containing 14 different emollients, including paraffin-free creams, was evaluated. This is the first time the impact of the presence of such a large range of emollients has been examined. Horizontal burn tests were conducted on emollient-contaminated fabrics. Significantly earlier ignition time were noted upon heating for all emollient-contaminated fabrics (p < 0.001) when compared to the behaviour of blank fabrics were noted using a vertical burn test. The mean time to ignition for 100% cotton fabric (151 ± 2 g/m2) was reduced from 71.5 to 14.4 s and for 52%/48% polyester/cotton fabric (103 ± 2 g/m2) from 328 to 12.9 s by the presence of emollients. Horizontal burn tests with a direct flame on 100% cotton fabric (114 ± 1 g/m2) displayed an accelerated mean flame speed from 0.0032 to 0.0048 ms−1 and an increased maximum flame height of 56.6 to 175.4 mm for emollient-contaminated fabrics. These findings demonstrate the fire risk of fabrics contaminated with a dried emollient. Their potential to ignite quickly and to propagate a fire may strongly decrease the reaction time of an impacted individual. Therefore, it is important that this risk and appropriate safety advice be continually highlighted and communicated not only in the UK but worldwide.

Description

open access article

Keywords

emollients, oil-based products, horizontal flammability tests, vertical flammability tests, fire fatalities and serious incidents, fire risk, fabric flammability

Citation

McDermott, R., Richards, M., Wright, M.-M., Shajan, G., Morrissey, J. and Hall, S. (2025) The Fire Behaviour of Fabrics Containing Dried Emollient Residues. Fire, 8, 133

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Research Institute

Leicester Institute for Pharmaceutical and Health Innovations