Fire Protection Basics

Understand the fire triangle, fire classes (A/B/C/D/K), and which extinguishing methods work best.

Effective fire protection starts with fundamentals. Fires behave differently depending on the fuel, so choosing the right method—water, foam, CO2, clean agents, wet chemical, or special dry powder—matters for safety, code compliance, and post-incident recovery.

Heat Fuel Oxygen

Fire requires Heat + Fuel + Oxygen. Suppression works by removing or interrupting one (or more) of these elements.

Fire Classes & Suitable Extinguishing Agents

ClassTypical FuelsSuitable AgentsMost Effective (General)Notes
AOrdinary combustibles (wood, paper, textiles)Water, Foam, Dry ChemicalWater (sprinklers/hose)Cool and soak to prevent re-ignition.
BFlammable liquids (diesel, solvents, oils)Foam, CO2, Dry ChemicalFoamDo not use water jets—risk of spread.
CFlammable gases (propane, butane)CO2, Dry ChemicalCO2Isolate gas supply; ventilate. Avoid ignition sources.
DCombustible metals (magnesium, aluminum, sodium)Special Dry Powder (Class D)Class-D PowderWater/foam can react violently. Use dedicated agents only.
K / FCooking oils and fatsWet Chemical, Foam (suitable types)Wet ChemicalDesigned to saponify oils; common in commercial kitchens.

Important: Always follow local codes and the manufacturer’s instructions. The most effective agent depends on the hazard, scale, ventilation, and detection/suppression design specifics.

Clean Agents & Sensitive Assets

For electronics, archives, and mission-critical spaces, clean agents (e.g., FM-200®, Novec™ 1230, inert gases) provide fast knock-down without residue, when engineered to the relevant standards.