Initiating Devices
Smoke detectors, heat detectors, manual pull stations, duct detectors, monitor modules, and detector placement rules.
- Compare photoelectric and ionization smoke detector operating principles
- Explain heat detector types and their placement spacing
- Describe manual pull station installation height and location requirements
- Identify duct detector placement and airflow requirements
- Explain monitor module function in addressable systems
Leçon 1
Smoke Detectors - Types, Spacing & Sensitivity
Smoke Detector Operating Principles
There are two primary types of spot-type smoke detectors, each using a different detection principle:
Photoelectric
Principle: Light scattering in a sensing chamber
Best for: Slow, smoldering fires
Response: Faster to visible smoke particles
False alarms: Less prone to cooking/steam
Ionization
Principle: Disruption of ionized air current
Best for: Fast, flaming fires
Response: Faster to small combustion particles
False alarms: More prone to cooking smoke
Spacing Requirements
The standard spacing for smoke detectors on smooth ceilings is 30 feet (9.1 m) between detectors, measured center-to-center. This translates to a maximum coverage area of 900 square feet per detector.
High-Ceiling Spacing Limit - The 40-Foot Rule
The 30-foot prescriptive spacing is only valid for ceilings up to 40 feet (12.2 m) in height. This is a critical boundary that is frequently tested on the NICET exam.
Ceilings Up to 40 ft (12.2 m)
30-foot prescriptive spacing applies
Standard NFPA 72 tables are valid
Smoke can reliably travel upward to ceiling detectors
Ceilings Above 40 ft (12.2 m)
Prescriptive spacing is voided
Performance-based design is required
Thermal stratification prevents smoke from reaching ceiling detectors at standard spacing
Thermal Stratification - Why High Ceilings Fail Standard Spacing
In spaces with ceilings above 40 feet, rising smoke plumes cool as they travel upward. At some height the smoke reaches ambient air temperature and stops rising - a phenomenon called thermal stratification. Detectors mounted at the ceiling may never detect the smoke, making the 30-foot rule unsafe and inapplicable at those heights.
Spacing must be reduced for:
- High ceilings - smoke may cool and stratify before reaching detectors (above 40 ft, prescriptive spacing is invalid)
- Beamed ceilings - beams deeper than 10% of ceiling height affect smoke travel
- High air movement - smoke may be diluted before reaching detectors
- Environmental factors - temperature, humidity, and dust
Sensitivity Testing
Smoke detectors must undergo sensitivity testing within 1 year of installation and then every 2 years thereafter. Detectors found outside their listed sensitivity range must be cleaned and recalibrated or replaced.
Photoelectric detectors respond best to smoldering fires, while ionization detectors respond best to flaming fires. Standard spacing is 30 feet on smooth ceilings - but this prescriptive spacing applies only for ceilings up to 40 feet (12.2 m). Above 40 feet, thermal stratification voids prescriptive spacing and performance-based design is required. Sensitivity testing is required within 1 year of installation and every 2 years after.