Behavior of Structures in Fire and Real Design - A Case Study
dc.contributor.author
Lamont, Susan
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dc.contributor.author
Lane, Barbara
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dc.contributor.author
Flint, Graeme
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dc.contributor.author
Usmani, Asif
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dc.date.accessioned
2007-02-14T14:37:37Z
dc.date.available
2007-02-14T14:37:37Z
dc.date.issued
2006
dc.description.abstract
A great deal of understanding into the behaviour of composite steel-concrete structures in fire has
been developed since the Cardington frame fire tests (UK) 1990s. This has now been broadened so
that structures in fire design has a real engineering basis and is not reliant on results from single
element testing in the standard furnace.
Several projects involving office buildings in the UK and abroad have highlighted the need for
developing the understanding of whole frame behaviour in fire. Since 9-11 robust engineering
solutions where the response of the building to an event like fire is known are in great demand. The
basics of structural mechanics at high temperatures can be used in design to understand many
structures with the aid of computer modelling.
This paper provides a direct comparison between the structural response of an 11-storey office
building now constructed in the city of London, when designed in a prescriptive manner, with applied
fire protection on all the load bearing steelwork, and the response of the same structure designed using
a performance based approach leaving the majority of secondary steelwork unprotected. The intent is
to demonstrate that structural stability during the fire limit state can be maintained in specific cases
without relying on passive fire protection.
This paper contributes to the field of structural fire engineering by extending the research work
previously conducted by the authors1 to a real design case and addresses the issues raised by
approving authorities, insurers and the client when a fire engineered approach is used to calculate
structural response to fire. It also demonstrates the use of advanced analysis to understand beam-core
connection response in fire, as part of a series of global finite element analyses to ensure that the
unprotected structure proposed provides structural stability and maintains compartmentation for the
design fires agreed with the necessary stakeholders in this project.
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3235483 bytes
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dc.format.mimetype
application/pdf
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dc.identifier.citation
Journal of Fire Protection Engineering, Vol. 16, No. 1, 5-35 (2006)
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1177/1042391506054038
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/1499
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
Society for Fire Protection Engineers
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dc.subject
thermal expansion
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dc.subject
performance based design
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dc.subject
prescriptive design
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dc.subject
approvals process
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dc.title
Behavior of Structures in Fire and Real Design - A Case Study
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dc.type
Preprint
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