compartmentation
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From compartment + -ation.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]compartmentation (plural compartmentations)
- Division into compartments; compartmentalization.
- So as to prevent the spread of fire within a structure.
- The fire spread rapidly after the building's compartmentation failed.
- 1958, Gunner's Mate 3: Navy Training Courses[1], Bureau of Naval Personnel, page 191:
- The reason for this compartmentation is FLAMETIGHT INTEGRITY. The purpose should be obvious: Propellent powder in flammable silk bags is always dangerous; compartmentation confines flame and explosive gas to the space in which it originates.
- So as to prevent the spread of water (or rarely, another fluid) between otherwise watertight compartments (especially on a ship).
- The Titanic's compartmentation did not stop water from entering rooms.
- 1937, “Naval Expansion Program”, in Hearing Before the Committee on Naval Affairs[2], United States: Government Printing Office, page 238:
- Compartmentation of the hull.—It has become the accepted practice in conventional rigid-airship construction to to subdivide the buoyant gas into numerous independent containers […]
- So as to prevent the spread of fire within a structure.
- (military) The dissemination of information and knowledge between different people or organisations on a need-to-know basis, so as to reduce the risk of espionage should one person or organisation be compromised externally; compartmentalization.
- 1956, Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy[3], volume 1, Washington: Joint Commission on Atomic Energy:
- Nevertheless the principles of compartmentation of information and need to know are essential to secrecy.