Analysis of the Effectiveness of Fire Drone Missions at Disaster Sites: An Empirical Approach

The use of drones in the public sector is expanding to various fields, and its effectiveness has been verified in some cases. Since its introduction to the Seoul Metropolitan Fire and Disaster Headquarters in 2016, drones have been used 1,240 times, including 405 times in disaster response. The purp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFire Science and Engineering Vol. 34; no. 5; pp. 112 - 119
Main Authors Shin, Yeol-Woo, Park, Jin-Ho
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 31.10.2020
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1738-7167
2508-6804
DOI10.7731/KIFSE.cba54f4c

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The use of drones in the public sector is expanding to various fields, and its effectiveness has been verified in some cases. Since its introduction to the Seoul Metropolitan Fire and Disaster Headquarters in 2016, drones have been used 1,240 times, including 405 times in disaster response. The purpose of this study is to analyze cases to determine the effectiveness of drones in operations such as searching, acquiring information, and monitoring, compared to traditional disaster response methods. In order to analyze the efficiency of the search missions, we divided the cases into vertical and horizontal searches and measured the response time of the drone compared to that of the firefighters. In terms of the information acquisition missions, the time spent on obtaining information and responding activities when the drone was deployed at building and forest fire sites were compared to missions in which the drone was not deployed. In the case of risk monitoring missions, the scope of the safety management personnel usually deployed at the site and the scope of the drone monitoring were compared. In horizontal searches, such as searching for missing persons, one drone can play the role of 100 people. In addition, drones are more than sixteen times faster than traditional methods in completing vertical searches in high-rise buildings, and 140 s faster in detecting fires in residential areas. Furthermore, it took more than an hour for 78 firefighters to locate a forest fire that broke out at night, but the drone located it in just two min. These results indicate that it is possible to use firefighter personnel more effectively and efficiently by using drones at disaster sites. To that end, more research on how to modulate the duties of firefighters while working with fire drones is required.
AbstractList The use of drones in the public sector is expanding to various fields, and its effectiveness has been verified in some cases. Since its introduction to the Seoul Metropolitan Fire and Disaster Headquarters in 2016, drones have been used 1,240 times, including 405 times in disaster response. The purpose of this study is to analyze cases to determine the effectiveness of drones in operations such as searching, acquiring information, and monitoring, compared to traditional disaster response methods. In order to analyze the efficiency of the search missions, we divided the cases into vertical and horizontal searches and measured the response time of the drone compared to that of the firefighters. In terms of the information acquisition missions, the time spent on obtaining information and responding activities when the drone was deployed at building and forest fire sites were compared to missions in which the drone was not deployed. In the case of risk monitoring missions, the scope of the safety management personnel usually deployed at the site and the scope of the drone monitoring were compared. In horizontal searches, such as searching for missing persons, one drone can play the role of 100 people. In addition, drones are more than sixteen times faster than traditional methods in completing vertical searches in high-rise buildings, and 140 s faster in detecting fires in residential areas. Furthermore, it took more than an hour for 78 firefighters to locate a forest fire that broke out at night, but the drone located it in just two min. These results indicate that it is possible to use firefighter personnel more effectively and efficiently by using drones at disaster sites. To that end, more research on how to modulate the duties of firefighters while working with fire drones is required.
Author Shin, Yeol-Woo
Park, Jin-Ho
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Yeol-Woo
  surname: Shin
  fullname: Shin, Yeol-Woo
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Jin-Ho
  surname: Park
  fullname: Park, Jin-Ho
BookMark eNp1kF1LwzAUhoNMsM7dep0_0JmkST-8K1unw4kX00spp-kJC3RtSYKwf2-deiN4deCF5z28zzWZ9UOPhNxytsyyhN89bTf7aqkbUNJIfUEioVgepzmTMxLxLMnjjKfZFVl4bxsm5ZQIpSLyXvbQnbz1dDA0HJBWxqAO9gN79OdwYx3StZve0Wc70UPvKQS6th58QEf3NqC_p2VPq-NondXQ0XIc3QD6cEMuDXQeFz93Tt421evqMd69PGxX5S7WXEgd87zliZCcQaJ5CiiLBFnT5qxgKjdaiFSkTQNto5AxBdMqI1mBRhV5y8C0yZwsv3u1G7x3aOrR2SO4U81Z_eWnPvupf_1MgPwDaBsgTOOCA9v9h30CUy1t8Q
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_7731_KIFSE_26686d3f
crossref_primary_10_7731_KIFSE_83b00abd
crossref_primary_10_3390_drones6120412
crossref_primary_10_7855_IJHE_2024_26_1_057
Cites_doi 10.1016/j.proeng.2017.12.132
ContentType Journal Article
DBID AAYXX
CITATION
DOI 10.7731/KIFSE.cba54f4c
DatabaseName CrossRef
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
DatabaseTitleList CrossRef
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
EISSN 2508-6804
EndPage 119
ExternalDocumentID 10_7731_KIFSE_cba54f4c
GroupedDBID AAYXX
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
CITATION
M~E
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c124c-18d132410a3c16ae493e0bd809058fc22626bbadb5e005a680f409ef598d0afd3
ISSN 1738-7167
IngestDate Tue Jul 01 03:43:16 EDT 2025
Thu Apr 24 22:55:06 EDT 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess false
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Issue 5
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c124c-18d132410a3c16ae493e0bd809058fc22626bbadb5e005a680f409ef598d0afd3
OpenAccessLink http://www.kifsejournal.or.kr/upload/pdf/KIFSE-cba54f4c.pdf
PageCount 8
ParticipantIDs crossref_primary_10_7731_KIFSE_cba54f4c
crossref_citationtrail_10_7731_KIFSE_cba54f4c
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2020-10-31
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2020-10-31
PublicationDate_xml – month: 10
  year: 2020
  text: 2020-10-31
  day: 31
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationTitle Fire Science and Engineering
PublicationYear 2020
References (ref4) 2020
Fire (ref2) 2017
Alan (ref8) 2020
(ref14) 2020
(ref6) 2017
Kim (ref10) 2019
(ref7) 2020
(ref16) 2020
(ref1) 2020
ref3
(ref9) 2017
(ref11) 2017
ref5
Won (ref15) 2016
(ref17) 2020
(ref12) 2017
(ref13) 2010
References_xml – start-page: 36
  year: 2020
  ident: ref8
– year: 2019
  ident: ref10
– volume-title: “Fire Response Report (2020.3.24.)
  year: 2020
  ident: ref14
– ident: ref5
– year: 2017
  ident: ref6
– year: 2017
  ident: ref11
– year: 2020
  ident: ref1
– start-page: 69
  year: 2016
  ident: ref15
– year: 2020
  ident: ref7
– year: 2017
  ident: ref2
– year: 2017
  ident: ref12
– year: 2020
  ident: ref17
– year: 2010
  ident: ref13
– year: 2020
  ident: ref4
– year: 2017
  ident: ref9
– start-page: 227
  year: 2020
  ident: ref16
– ident: ref3
  doi: 10.1016/j.proeng.2017.12.132
SSID ssib044738255
ssib006781895
ssib012146351
ssib016698144
ssib005300067
Score 1.7412454
Snippet The use of drones in the public sector is expanding to various fields, and its effectiveness has been verified in some cases. Since its introduction to the...
SourceID crossref
SourceType Enrichment Source
Index Database
StartPage 112
Title Analysis of the Effectiveness of Fire Drone Missions at Disaster Sites: An Empirical Approach
Volume 34
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3LbtQwFLWGsmGDqAqivORFJRZVSpw4icNuRGc0LRo2bUVZwMhPEakkVWe6YcG3c23HiYsGqbCJEsu2Et-T4-PHvUboIC1FphgzidDwk1NZwl3OeELKUmpGKq5r6zu8_FQuLujpZXE5mXyLdi3dbsSR_LnVr-R_rAppYFfrJfsPlh0qhQS4B_vCFSwM13vZOI4oYgWkD0Uc-AsS50Boh8c3HSjJZWP3u7Zr67143Ky5DZBweAaCc93PDc5-XDc-Xsi0jzMeC1dXUyACO9keBTIcZmm--4AEX3R3lXzuunF5yu_HPm3aZNHF8wwwqBwJ2lNjBdQIoyvfPWqXBvqJJSXzBwgHPu0nJ5t4xdqRI-k3TOv-qd5G4VWVWwr_eDI_mx1JwQtqqBw7q7BA_0cfNuwshDGNrWHlyq9C-QfoYVZVbhl_-WsW8Y_rrUf-qUC-jH7KxB56no-rpoDfmpFRDlEKTZK5g3WHxvFxQe0rvLv7CZHuiQTM-RP0uB954KmH0S6a6HYPfQ0Qwp3BACF8B0I20RoeOwjhACHMNzhACDsIvcfTFg8AwgFAT9HFfHb-YZH0J24kEnSeTAhTBBQ2SXkuSck1rXOdCsXSOi2YkSDVs1IIrkShofU4WN7QtNamqJlKuVH5M7TTwgs9R9gUQuiMKqOogiGuEVCCasFy6DWyWot9lIT2WMk-HL09FeVqtd2E--jtkP_aB2L5S84X9875Ej0akf4K7WxubvVr0Jgb8cYB5TfG23gC
linkProvider ISSN International Centre
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Analysis+of+the+Effectiveness+of+Fire+Drone+Missions+at+Disaster+Sites%3A+An+Empirical+Approach&rft.jtitle=Fire+Science+and+Engineering&rft.au=Shin%2C+Yeol-Woo&rft.au=Park%2C+Jin-Ho&rft.date=2020-10-31&rft.issn=1738-7167&rft.eissn=2508-6804&rft.volume=34&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=112&rft.epage=119&rft_id=info:doi/10.7731%2FKIFSE.cba54f4c&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10_7731_KIFSE_cba54f4c
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1738-7167&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1738-7167&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1738-7167&client=summon