The Blue Whirl: Clark School Research in the News

The Blue Whirl: Clark School Research in the News

The Blue Whirl: Clark School Research in the News

Successive frames showing transition between a laminar blue whirl and a yellow whirl taken from a high-speed video. Photo: University of Maryland
Successive frames showing transition between a laminar blue whirl and a yellow whirl taken from a high-speed video. Photo: University of Maryland

Fire tornados, or ‘fire whirls,’ pose a powerful and essentially uncontrollable threat to life, property, and the surrounding environment in large urban and wildland fires. But now, a team of researchers in the A. James Clark School of Engineering at the University of Maryland (UMD) say their discovery of a type of fire tornado they call a ‘blue whirl’ could lead to beneficial new approaches in reduced carbon emissions and improved oil spill cleanup.

A new paper recently published in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) describes this previously unobserved flame phenomenon, which burns nearly soot-free. The paper's authors are Huahua Xiao, assistant research scientist in the Department of Aerospace Engineering; Michael Gollner, assistant professor in the Department of Fire Protection Engineering; and Elaine Oran, Glenn L. Martin Institute Professor of Engineering in the Department of Aerospace Engineering.

Recent media coverage of the blue whirl research is below:

August 8, 2016


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Saikat Guha Elevated to IEEE Fellow

How Microscopic Metals Could Shift Catalysts Production

Christmas Tree Burning Demonstrations Shed Light on Holiday Safety Practices

Fischell Institute Advances Surgical Innovation for LMICs

Looking A“Head” to the Future of Autonomous Robots

Two Maryland Engineers Named to National Academy of Inventors

Autonomy Summit Explores Potential and Challenges of AI

Trio of Maryland Engineers Named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Lists

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar