
- Describe, with the aid of sketches, the difference between an obscuration type smoke detector and a light scatter type smoke detector.(10)
Obscuration Type Smoke Detector
- Principle: Operates on the reduction of light intensity when smoke passes between a light source (lamp/LED) and a photoelectric cell in a straight line.
- Arrangement:
- Light beam projects across a chamber to a photocell.
- In clear air, full light reaches the cell → no alarm.
- When smoke particles enter, they obscure or block the beam, reducing light intensity on the sensor.
- Trigger: Alarm activates when the received light intensity falls below a set threshold.
- Best suited for: Open areas where dense smoke is expected (e.g. cargo holds, machinery spaces).
Sketch idea:
- Rectangular chamber.
- Light source (LED) on one side.
- Photodiode/photocell directly opposite.
- Smoke cloud shown between them, blocking light beam.
Light Scatter Type Smoke Detector
- Principle: Uses the Tyndall effect (light scattering). Smoke particles entering the chamber scatter light from the source in multiple directions.
- Arrangement:
- Light source (LED) projects across the chamber.
- A photodiode sensor is placed at an angle (not in direct line).
- In clear air, sensor receives no light.
- When smoke enters, particles scatter the beam, and light is deflected onto the sensor.
- Trigger: Alarm sounds when scattered light exceeds a threshold.
- Best suited for: Early detection of light/incipient smoke (e.g. electronic spaces, control rooms).
Sketch idea:
- Circular/rectangular chamber.
- LED on one side, beam passing across chamber.
- Sensor mounted at ~90° angle to beam.
- Smoke cloud drawn in, deflecting light onto the sensor.
Key Differences
- Detection principle:
- Obscuration: Reduction in transmitted light.
- Scatter: Increase in scattered light.
- Sensor placement:
- Obscuration: Directly in line with source.
- Scatter: At an angle to the source.
- Smoke type sensitivity:
- Obscuration: More effective with dense smoke.
- Scatter: More effective with light/incipient smoke.