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Smoke Alarms & Detectors
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A smoke detector (sometimes called a "smoke alarm")
is a safety device that detects airborne smoke and issues an audible alarm,
thereby alerting nearby people to the danger of fire. Most smoke detectors
work either by optical detection or by ionization, but some of them use
both detection methods to increase sensitivity to smoke.
History
In 1902 George Andrew Darby, an electrical engineer of 211 Bloomsbury
Street, Birmingham, England, patented the electrical Heat-Indicator and
Fire Alarm. The device indicated any change of temperature in the apartment
where it was fixed. The device operated by closing an electrical circuit
to sound an alarm if the temperature raised above the safe limit. The
contact was made by bridging a gap with a conductor, or allowing one plate
to fall on another: this movement was caused simply by a block of butter
which melted as the temperature raised. This early device subsequently
gave way to more modern fire and eventually smoke alarms.
In 1969, the patent for this invention was claimed
by Kenneth House and Randolph Smith.
Optical Smoke Detector
This type of detector includes a light source, a lens to collimate the
light into a beam, and a photodiode or other photoelectric sensor at right-angles
to the beam. In the absence of smoke, the light passes in front of the
detector but does not fall on it. When visible smoke enters the beam,
some light is scattered by the smoke particles, and some of the scattered
light is detected by the sensor. An increased output from the sensor sets
off the alarm.
Ionization detector
This type of detector is cheaper than the optical detector, and can detect
particles of smoke that are too small to be visible. It includes a tiny
mass of radioactive americium-241, which is a source of alpha radiation.
The radiation passes through an ionization chamber, which is an air-filled
space between two electrodes, and permits a small, constant current to
flow between the electrodes. Any smoke that enters the chamber absorbs
the alpha particles, which reduces the ionization and interrupts this
flow of current, setting off the alarm. Hot air entering the chamber changes
the rate of ionization and therefore, the electric current level, which
triggers an alarm.
Batteries
Most residential smoke detectors run on alkaline batteries. If these batteries
run out, the smoke detector will become inactive. Most smoke detectors
are designed to signal a low battery condition, but it is common for houses
to have smoke detectors with dead batteries. As a result, public information
campaigns have been created to remind people to change their smoke detector
batteries regularly. In regions using daylight saving time, these campaigns
usually suggest that people change their batteries when they change their
clocks. Some detectors are also being sold with a lithium battery that
can run for about 7 to 10 years, though this might actually make it less
likely for people to change batteries since their replacement is needed
so infrequently. Most detectors today, particularly those installed during
new construction, are wired to the main electricity flow of buildings.
Many of these units also include a battery backup to ensure operation
during a power outage.
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Cell
Pack Solutions Ltd -
Unit 218 Tedco Business Works,
South Shields, Tyne and Wear, NE33 1RF. UK.
Tel: +44 (0)191 4274577 - Fax: +44 (0)191 4274606 -
E-mail:
VAT No: 708 9179 02 - Company No: 4177772
www.cellpacksolutions.co.uk
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