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Article

Experimental Investigation on the Post-Fire Performance of Multiple-Strength-Grade Steel Wires

1
School of Architectural Engineering, Jinling Institute of Technology, Nanjing 211169, China
2
Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Intelligent and Low-Carbon Transportation, Nanjing 211169, China
3
School of Civil Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Buildings 2025, 15(17), 3183; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173183
Submission received: 2 August 2025 / Revised: 25 August 2025 / Accepted: 1 September 2025 / Published: 4 September 2025
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)

Abstract

This study assessed the critical fire resistance of bridge cables by investigating post-fire tensile degradation of high-strength steel wires (1860, 1960, 2100 MPa) heated under initial stress (10% and 40% of design strength) to 300 °C, 400 °C, 500 °C, and 600 °C followed by cooling to an ambient temperature. Tensile tests determined reduction coefficients (RCs) for proportional limit (σp), yield strength (σy), ultimate strength (σu), elastic modulus (E), and elongation (δ) relative to ambient values, with constitutive models for σp, σy, and σu RCs integrating temperature, stress, and grade. Visual observation showed intensified wire hue and reduced necking with increasing temperature. All RCs remained stable up to 300 °C; beyond this temperature, σp, σy, and σu RCs progressively decreased, averaging 77.5%, 65.7%, and 61.9% at 600 °C under lower-level initial stress (10%) and 74.1%, 63.8%, and 60.6% at 400 °C under higher-level initial stress (40%). Elastic modulus exhibited minimal variation, whereas elongation reached its minimum at 400 °C under lower-level initial stress but its maximum at 400 °C under higher-level initial stress. The impact of lower-level initial stress on mechanical properties was negligible, showing a less than 3.2% average RC decrease at 600 °C. Higher-level initial stress accelerated mechanical property degradation with increasing temperature, with comparable degradation patterns observed across different steel wire strength grades. The models confirm maximum temperature dominance in degradation, supporting a recommended critical fire-resistant temperature of approximately 400 °C for bridge cable wires.

1. Introduction

As traffic volume increases, so does the number of vehicles transporting flammable and explosive hazardous materials [1,2], thereby heightening the risk of bridge fires due to vehicle collisions and tanker accidents. U.S. highway statistics indicate that there are 376,000 fires each year, resulting in 570 fatalities and economic losses amounting to $1.28 billion [3], which underscores the significant threat that bridge fires pose to infrastructure and public safety. Notably, bridge fire protection is less adequately addressed in current design codes and maintenance guidelines compared to natural disasters [4,5,6]. Despite advancements in wind and seismic resistance, fire prevention for bridges has been neglected. Research indicates that fires cause more damage to bridges than earthquakes, emphasizing the necessity of enhancing fire protection measures [7]. Fires pose a serious threat to the steel components of bridges. High temperatures can soften steel and diminish its strength [8]. When the yield strength decreases, localized failures may occur, potentially leading to bridge collapse. Since bridge cables and high-strength steel wires are critical load-bearing elements, it is essential to study their behavior under fire conditions and to improve their fire resistance [9,10].
To simulate and evaluate temperature fields, researchers developed an enhanced Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model integrated with InfoGAN technology [11,12]. This model considers heat source release and fluid flow conductivity, predicting internal furnace temperatures from partial operational data. However, its practical use is limited by a high computational burden and slow convergence, hindering real-time acquisition of temperature fields. Regarding the degradation mechanisms of high-strength steel wires’ load-bearing capacity, prediction methods based on 3D measurement data were proposed [13,14]. These methods incorporate temperature, creep, and corrosion effects on steel wires to predict degradation and establish constitutive models but ignore stress factors, limiting their universality. To accurately assess cable structures’ thermal response, theoretical solutions and finite element simulations calculate steel wire temperature distributions; for computational efficiency, 2D thermal response models simulate heat conduction and temperature profiles in cable sections [15,16,17].
Cable-supported bridges rely mainly on cables as load-bearing components [18]. Without protection, cables are vulnerable to mechanical degradation or failure in fires due to steel wire property deterioration [19], making studying high-temperature mechanical degradation of steel wires crucial for evaluating bridge cable performance during and after fires. Researchers conducted post-fire degradation studies on multiple-strength-grade steel wires (1570 MPa, 1670 MPa, 1770 MPa, 1860 MPa, and 1980 MPa) [20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28]. These studies involved heating experiments and ambient-temperature tensile tests. Currently, 300 °C is recognized as the bridge cable failure threshold [29], adopted as the critical control temperature in technical codes [30]. However, this threshold primarily reflects the damage temperature of the cable’s protective layer rather than the performance degradation temperature of the steel wires themselves. The 300 °C threshold also fails to accurately characterize the performance damage temperature of high-strength steel wires, thus creating an urgent need to fill the knowledge gap in the field of their fire performance.
Notably, significant degradation occurs above 400 °C under conditions without initial stress [31,32]. Studies have shown that the elastic modulus of steel wires remains almost constant even when exposed to temperatures up to 900 °C; however, when temperatures reach 400–800 °C, the reduction rates of their yield strength and ultimate strength can be as high as 40–90% and 35–85%, respectively [33,34]. Current research is limited: it focuses on specific strength grades without establishing universal laws, lacks fire resistance studies on over 2000 MPa steel wires, and lacks performance comparisons with conventional wires, thus failing to support fire safety design and post-fire evaluation.
Beyond temperature, multiple factors have been examined in post-fire mechanical evaluations of steel wires. Studies comparing different heating curves [35], steel wire strength grades, cooling methods [36], and initial stress levels [37] during fire simulation experiments indicate that the maximum temperature reached dominates mechanical degradation, with the heating process itself proving practically irrelevant [38]. Notably, degradation exhibits significant scatter even among wires of identical strength grades subjected to similar heating programs, and no clear correlation emerges between strength grade and the degradation of typical mechanical properties. Sprinkler cooling can considerably influence the extent of performance deterioration in sprinkler systems [36,39,40]. Two post-fire cooling measures, i.e., air and water cooling, have also been introduced in several investigations. The water-cooling method causes a greater degree of degradation in the strength of the steel wire, and the difference from the air-cooling method can reach 28%. Furthermore, initial stress shows negligible influence on wire rope properties below 450 °C. However, its role becomes dominant above this threshold; at 600 °C, specimens under initial stress exhibit ultimate failure stresses approximately 12% lower than unstressed counterparts [41].
Previous studies mainly focused on individual factors (e.g., high temperature or stress) influencing the post-fire mechanical degradation of steel wires. However, comprehensive investigations into their combined effects are limited. Existing research lacks a systematic quantification of how the combined action of high temperature and stress affects the mechanical properties of steel wires after a fire, suggesting further exploration is needed to understand this complex interaction mechanism. To address these gaps, this study tested 135 steel wires (1860–2100 MPa) to evaluate how elevated temperatures and initial stress impact post-fire appearance, failure modes, and key mechanical properties of steel wires under various stress states. Based on experimental results, we established reduction coefficient rules for mechanical property degradation during and after high-temperature exposure. We further developed empirical equations for the high-temperature stress–strain behavior, established a damage model applicable to steel wires of multiple strength grades, and clarified critical temperature thresholds for the fire safety design of high-strength bridge cables, providing recommended indicators for the performance evaluation of bridge cables post-fire.

2. Test Scheme

2.1. Test Specimens

The test specimens comprised high-strength steel wires graded at 1860 MPa, 1960 MPa, and 2100 MPa. All specimens featured identical dimensions: 600 mm length and 7 mm diameter (conforming to GB/T 228.2 [42]), as illustrated in Figure 1. The specimens were produced and processed through the same manufacturing line with the chemical compositions provided in Table 1. Specimens were categorized into three groups by strength grade, each group included five heating conditions corresponding to target maximum temperatures. To mitigate material randomness, high-strength steel wires from the same batch were randomly assigned to different experimental groups, with each initial stress test group comprising 15 specimens as detailed in the experimental matrix presented in Table 2.

2.2. Test Setup

A thermo-mechanical coupling test setup, shown in Figure 2, simulated the actual state of steel wires under fire. Each specimen was rigidly fixed at one end to a steel reaction frame with its opposite end connected to a mechanical loading system. This system applied calibrated tensile forces using a lever principle through adjustable combinations of lever arm lengths and mass blocks. Specimens were heated within an electric high-temperature furnace featuring a cylindrical configuration, a central through-hole, 240 mm diameter, 460 mm height, and maximum operating temperature of 1200 °C.
Following the initial stress application, heating to the target temperature for 30 min, and subsequent cooling to an ambient temperature, tensile testing was performed using an electronic universal testing machine, as shown in Figure 3, with a 100 kN maximum capacity. This machine provides load measurement accuracy of ±0.1 kN and a measurement range spanning 0.2–100% of capacity with errors not exceeding ±0.5%, while the deformation measurement exhibits errors below 0.5% of the indicated value.
Tensile testing proceeded at a crossbeam displacement velocity of 5 mm/min, corresponding to a strain rate of 1.39 × 10−4 s−1 compliant with ISO and ASTM standards. Strain gauges and an extensometer acquired displacement data at 50 samples per second, with all data automatically documented to generate load–deformation curves.

2.3. Test Process

Figure 4 presents the entire test procedure flow. A thermo-mechanical coupling test was performed on steel wire specimens under initial stresses set at a lower level (10% of design stress) and higher level (40% of design stress). Heating progressed per the ISO-834 recommended curve [43,44] to the maximum temperature shown in Figure 5 and was maintained for 30 min. Specimens were then removed from the furnace, cooled to an ambient temperature, and tensile tested at 5 mm/min until fracture failure [42], with load and deformation measured throughout. Machine-recorded force data and extensometer-corrected deformation data yielded load–deformation curves for subsequent analysis. Engineering stress–strain curves derived from this data provided mechanical indicators, including the proportional limit (σp), the yield strength (σy), the ultimate strength (σu), the elastic modulus (E), and the elongation (δ).

3. Experimental Results

3.1. Failure Modes and Visual Observation

Following thermo-mechanical coupling tests and subsequent cooling, stretched steel wire specimens exhibited distinct visual appearances corresponding to maximum temperatures, with varying fracture geometries shown in Figure 6. Fracture surface coloration evolved with increasing maximum temperature: specimens tested statically at an ambient temperature displayed gray-white surfaces; at 300 °C surfaces appeared silvery gray; between 400 °C and 500 °C fractures transitioned to bluish gray; at 600 °C surfaces turned charcoal gray. Substantial zinc oxide particle formation indicated galvanized coating deterioration beginning at 500 °C.
The maximum temperature exerted significant influence on fracture morphology, with fracture section shapes under varying maximum temperatures presented in Figure 7 and Figure 8. Specimens without initial stress exhibited irregular, rough fractures with pronounced necking below 400 °C. At 400 °C, reduced cross-sectional area and diminished necking indicated a brittle transition. By 600 °C, fractures became planar with distinct radial patterns, confirming brittle failure. This transition was further shaped by material microstructure and composition, with grain size, precipitates, and alloying elements adjusting the fracture features alongside thermal and stress effects. An initial stress application accelerated this ductile-to-brittle transition.
Scanning electron microscopy captured microscopic fracture morphologies across temperature levels, as depicted in Figure 9, comprehensively depicting failure modes. The SEM micrograph of a 600 °C fracture exhibits a planar surface with radial striations. These radial features denote crack propagation from a central origin with minimal plastic deformation, characteristic of brittle fracture. The planar texture and radial markings indicate rapid crack propagation under stress at 600 °C, aligning with brittle failure (little ductile deformation, unlike ductile-featured necked fractures at lower temperatures). Results demonstrated a progressive necking reduction below 400 °C and transition to brittle planar fractures above 600 °C.

3.2. Stress-Strain Curves

Tensile testing yielded engineering stress-strain curves for all specimens, as shown in Figure 10, showing similar profiles but significant mechanical indicator variations across test conditions. Below 400 °C, inter-curve deviations remain minimal, and temperatures exceeding 400 °C produced substantial degradation. Yield strength (σy) and ultimate strength (σu) progressively decreased with rising temperatures while the elastic modulus (E) exhibited minimal variation throughout the heating regime.

3.3. Key Mechanical Performance Indicators

Stress–strain curve analysis extracts key mechanical indicators characterizing steel wire performance employing four parameters—proportional limit (σp), yield strength (σy), ultimate strength (σu), and elastic modulus (E)—to quantify degradation. Figure 11 identifies their characteristic positions: proportional limit denotes the maximum elastic-stage stress, yield strength represents the stress at 0.2% plastic strain (proof stress), and ultimate strength corresponds to peak stress. The elastic modulus is computed as the linear slope between 10% and 50% of the yield strength [45].
Experimental data processing computed average values for σp, σy, σu, and E across all test cases, which are presented in Table 3, Table 4 and Table 5, with reduction coefficients standard deviations in Table 6. The standard deviation of the E is so small that it cannot be presented. To analyze the influence mechanisms of different factors, the RCs of four indicators are calculated by dividing by normalizing against ambient-temperature conditions and presented in the table as well. As shown in the tables, three strength indicators, i.e., σp, σy and σu, decrease monotonically as the temperature rises, while the value of E remains almost constant under various elevated temperatures.
Furthermore, specimens subjected to higher-level initial stress (40%) exhibited cross-sectional contraction during heating, reducing actual cross-sectional area; subsequent tensile tests using the original area for E calculations consequently yielded underestimated values. At lower-level initial stress (10%), δ minimized after 400 °C heating, whereas higher-level initial stress resulted in gradual δ increase.

4. Impact Analysis

4.1. Temperatures

Building upon elastic modulus (E) reduction under higher-level initial stress (40%), stress levels below a lower-level (10%) E exhibit minimal variation, remaining effectively independent of temperature, initial stress, and strength grade with reduction coefficient fluctuations below a 4.8% range. Consequently, subsequent analysis focuses exclusively on the remaining four indicators. Specimens are grouped by strength grade (1860, 1960, and 2100 MPa) in Figure 12, with the reduction coefficients (RCs) column demonstrating a temperature invariance below 300 °C (all RCs within 95–105%); beyond 300 °C each indicator follows distinct thermal degradation behaviors.
Progressive temperature increases above 300 °C drive monotonic declines in σp, σy, and σu. At 600 °C, average RCs decrease to 80.9%, 69.6%, and 65.5%, respectively. Under lower-level initial stress, these values further reduce to 77.5%, 65.7%, and 61.9%, with specimens fracturing before reaching 700 °C. Higher-level initial stress accelerates damage precipitously—inducing fracture before 500 °C. At 400 °C under higher-level initial stress, RCs plummet to 74.1%, 63.8%, and 60.6%, establishing 400 °C as the critical threshold where lower-level initial stress conditions preserve strength integrity while high stress precipitates fracture. Elongation (δ) displays non-monotonic behavior: under lower-level initial stress conditions, δ minimizes at 400 °C, averaging 87.7% of ambient-temperature values, whereas higher-level initial conditions produce continuous δ increases with temperature. Compared to primary mechanical indicators, δ demonstrates larger standard deviations showing significant numerical fluctuations. Evaluation criteria for fire-damaged cable ductility should therefore adopt conservative thresholds to prevent overestimation due to elongation variability.
Setting this 400 °C critical temperature establishes safety design indicators for post-fire bridge performance assessment. Monitoring bridge cable stress enables determination of post-fire safety performance through combined analysis of temperature exposure and stress history.

4.2. Initial Wire Stress

Experimental results, as shown in Table 3, Table 4 and Table 5, indicate that initial stress exerts a weak influence on E and δ but moderate impact on three strength indicators. Figure 13 illustrates temperature-dependent variation trends of these strength indicators grouped by initial stress magnitude. Lower-level initial stress (10%) decreases less than 7.6% across temperatures with average reduction coefficients of 3.2%. The indicator decreases by a value of 1.8–5.4% at 600 °C, establishing its negligible effect on mechanical performance. Higher-level initial stress (40%) substantially accelerates degradation: strength reduction coefficients at 300 °C approximate those at 500 °C under lower-level initial stress with parallel failure progression. Fracture occurs above 600 °C for lower-level initial stress specimens versus above 400 °C for higher-level initial stress counterparts.
These distinct degradation behaviors can be attributed to temperature–stress coupling effects on dislocation activity. At elevated temperatures, thermal energy facilitates dislocation migration, while initial stress provides an additional driving force for dislocation motion. For lower-level initial stress, the combined energy is insufficient to overcome lattice friction and grain boundary pinning, resulting in slow dislocation accumulation and minimal strength reduction. In contrast, higher-level initial stress lowers the activation barrier for dislocation slip and climb, accelerating cross-boundary movement and promoting microcrack formation at lower temperatures. This explains why specimens under 40% initial stress exhibit earlier fracture (above 400 °C) and more rapid strength degradation compared to those under 10% initial stress.

4.3. Strength Grade of Steel Wires

Figure 13 reveals discernible variations in post-temperature strength indicators across high-strength steel wire grades, with consistent maximum inter-grade strength differentials of approximately 5.0%. This disparity extends to high-temperature mechanical properties, including proportional limit, yield strength, and ultimate strength, indicating that commonly employed bridge suspension wires exhibit similar failure mode characteristics and mechanical performance reduction patterns. Their temperature response primarily manifests above the critical temperature; increased strength grades show no significant elongation enhancement, maintain comparable failure characteristics, and demonstrate minimal elastic modulus variation.

4.4. Cooling Method

To investigate the influence of cooling methods on the mechanical properties of high-strength steel wires, the experiment compared the mechanical properties and RCs obtained from tensile tests of 1960 MPa high-strength steel wire specimens under higher-level initial stress (40%) after being heated to 300 °C and 400 °C, followed by natural cooling and water quenching, respectively. Figure 14 shows water quenching increased σp, σy, and σu by 6.3%, 6.9%, and 5.0%, respectively, but caused marked elongation reduction. Microstructurally, rapid cooling triggers non-diffusive austenite transformation, forming hard brittle martensite or bainite structures, explaining water quenching’s strength enhancement at the expense of toughness relative to natural cooling.
To further explore the microstructural basis and practical relevance, an additional SEM microscopic analysis was conducted on water-quenched specimens, as shown in Figure 15. The images clearly reveal a network of interconnected cracks: primary reticulated cracks span the microstructure in crisscrossing patterns, with finer linear branch cracks propagating perpendicularly from their main trunks. These crack networks, formed by rapid cooling-induced thermal stress concentration, exhibit uneven distribution—denser in regions with higher thermal gradient effects. Notably, water quenching, with rapid cooling from direct water contact, aligns closely with fire sprinkler cooling in core mechanisms: both use water-mediated heat extraction for phase transformations. Though cooling rates differ, with water quenching at 102–103 °C/s and sprinklers at 100–101 °C/s, the stress-driven crack formation mechanisms were parallel. Such crack characteristics under water quenching largely represent those under real fire spray cooling, aiding understanding of material integrity under thermal-mechanical loading.

5. Constitutive Model for Reduction Coefficients

Given elastic modulus reduction’s independence from temperature, initial stress, and strength grade coupled with significant elongation fluctuation, the post high-temperature mechanical property reduction model focuses exclusively on strength indicators σp, σy, and σu. Based on physical mechanisms and data characteristics, the least squares method parameter estimation produces the empirical Equation (1).
Building on Section 4.3’s analysis demonstrating similar degradation patterns across strength grades, a unified empirical equation incorporating 0–100% initial stress and temperature variation is established. Model validation against experimental data appears in Figure 16.
Additionally, by comparing the reduction patterns of proportional limit, yield strength, and ultimate strength reported in the reference literature and referencing them with the experimental results from [46,47,48], as shown in Figure 17, it is evident that the calculation outcomes of the aforementioned references are largely consistent with those of this study, thereby validating the accuracy of the present results.
R C σ p = 0.996 + 4.577 × 10 4 T + 3.905 × 10 4 σ 1.183 × 10 6 T 2 1.368 × 10 3 T · σ 1.803 × 10 2 σ 2 R C σ y = 0.998 + 7.683 × 10 4 T + 1.900 × 10 2 σ 2.081 × 10 6 T 2 1.896 × 10 3 T · σ 1.946 × 10 3 σ 2 R C σ u = 0.996 + 7.353 × 10 4 T + 2.136 × 10 2 σ 1.814 × 10 6 T 2 2.277 × 10 3 T · σ 2.136 × 10 3 σ 2

6. Conclusions

To evaluate the post-fire degradation mechanism of bridge steel wires, a thermo-mechanical coupling test was carried out on high-strength steel wires. The test involved different elevated temperatures and initial stress levels, which reached up to 10% and 40% of the design strength, respectively. After acquiring the engineering stress–strain curves of the heated steel wires, five mechanical indicators were extracted to systematically explore the combined influences of temperature, initial stress, and strength grade. Through careful examination and analysis, the following key conclusions were derived:
  • The transition of the fracture mode is critically contingent upon the maximum temperature. When the temperature is below 300 °C, fractures display irregular roughness accompanied by necking phenomena. At 400 °C, the fracture cross-sections start to contract, and by 600 °C, the fractures transform into planar surfaces with radial patterns, which verifies the ductile-to-brittle transition. The application of initial stress notably expedites this transition process.
  • The evolution of mechanical properties reveals that the reduction coefficients (RCs) of the elastic modulus vary within 4.8%, demonstrating negligible dependence on temperature, stress, and strength grade. Conversely, strength indicators such as the proportional limit (σp), yield strength (σy), and ultimate tensile strength (σu) exhibit significant decline. Specifically, these values decrease notably above 400 °C, reaching approximately 80%, 70%, and 65% of their ambient-temperature counterparts at 600 °C, respectively. When subjected to a lower-level initial stress (10%), the strength of the specimen decreased by only 1.2–7.6% compared with that without initial stress, with an average decrease of 3.2%, and fracture occurred before reaching 700 °C. In contrast, higher-level initial stress (40%) accelerates degradation dramatically, causing specimens to fracture below 500 °C and reducing the RCs of σp, σy, and σu to approximately 75%, 65%, and 60% at 400 °C. The elongation (δ) at break reaches its minimum value (87.7% of ambient temperature) at 400 °C under lower-level initial stress conditions but increases steadily under higher-level initial stress scenarios. Consequently, 400 °C is identified as the critical temperature threshold for mechanical property degradation. Setting the critical temperature establishes safety design indicators for evaluating post-fire bridge safety performance. Additionally, water quenching enhances strength properties but compromises toughness relative to natural cooling.
  • In analyzing the mechanical properties of post-fire steel wires, this study focuses on the reduction trends of three primary performance indicators. By comprehensively considering the initial stress level and temperature change dynamics, a curve-fitting approach was employed to establish the empirical equation for the reduction coefficient of post-fire steel wires. A damage model applicable to steel wires of multiple strength grades was developed. This model has demonstrated good effectiveness in evaluating the degradation law and evolution mechanism of the mechanical properties of steel wires under fire, providing strong theoretical support and practical tools for the safety performance analysis of bridge cable after fire.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, Y.S. and T.G.; methodology, Y.S.; validation, W.Z. and J.S.; formal analysis, W.Z.; investigation, J.S.; resources, X.W.; data curation, X.W.; writing—original draft preparation, X.W.; writing—review and editing, Y.S. and X.W.; visualization, X.W.; supervision, T.G.; project administration, W.Z.; funding acquisition, Y.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The research was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (grant no. 2024YFC3016901), the Postgraduate Research & Practice Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province (grant no. SJCX24_1324) and the Fund for Natural Science Research of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions of China (grant no. 23KJB560008).

Data Availability Statement

Some or all data, models, or codes that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

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Figure 1. Dimensions of test specimen.
Figure 1. Dimensions of test specimen.
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Figure 2. Thermo-mechanical coupling test setup. (a) Device picture; (b) schematic picture.
Figure 2. Thermo-mechanical coupling test setup. (a) Device picture; (b) schematic picture.
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Figure 3. Tensile test setup. (a) Device picture; (b) schematic picture.
Figure 3. Tensile test setup. (a) Device picture; (b) schematic picture.
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Figure 4. Experimental flowchart.
Figure 4. Experimental flowchart.
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Figure 5. Heating curve.
Figure 5. Heating curve.
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Figure 6. Characterization of high-strength steel wire post tensile test. (a) 1860 MPa, (b) 1960 MPa, (c) 2100 MPa.
Figure 6. Characterization of high-strength steel wire post tensile test. (a) 1860 MPa, (b) 1960 MPa, (c) 2100 MPa.
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Figure 7. Fracture morphology of high-strength steel wire. (a) With initial stress; (b) without initial stress.
Figure 7. Fracture morphology of high-strength steel wire. (a) With initial stress; (b) without initial stress.
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Figure 8. Fracture characteristics of high-strength steel wire post tensile test. (a) With initial stress; (b) without initial stress.
Figure 8. Fracture characteristics of high-strength steel wire post tensile test. (a) With initial stress; (b) without initial stress.
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Figure 9. Fracture microstructure of high-strength steel wires at different temperatures.
Figure 9. Fracture microstructure of high-strength steel wires at different temperatures.
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Figure 10. Stress–strain curves of high-strength steel wires. (a) With 10% initial stress, (b) with 40% initial stress, and (c) without initial stress.
Figure 10. Stress–strain curves of high-strength steel wires. (a) With 10% initial stress, (b) with 40% initial stress, and (c) without initial stress.
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Figure 11. Physical definition of four indicators.
Figure 11. Physical definition of four indicators.
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Figure 12. Scatters of σp, σy, σu, E, and δ with temperatures. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, (c) ultimate strength, (d) elastic modulus, and (e) elongation.
Figure 12. Scatters of σp, σy, σu, E, and δ with temperatures. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, (c) ultimate strength, (d) elastic modulus, and (e) elongation.
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Figure 13. The influence of initial stress on the mechanical properties of steel wires with different strength-grades. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength.
Figure 13. The influence of initial stress on the mechanical properties of steel wires with different strength-grades. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength.
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Figure 14. The influence of natural cooling and water quenching on the mechanical properties of steel wire.
Figure 14. The influence of natural cooling and water quenching on the mechanical properties of steel wire.
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Figure 15. Fracture microstructure of high-strength steel wire post water quenching.
Figure 15. Fracture microstructure of high-strength steel wire post water quenching.
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Figure 16. Comparison of performance reduction coefficient curves for high-strength steel wires post high-temperature cooling. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength.
Figure 16. Comparison of performance reduction coefficient curves for high-strength steel wires post high-temperature cooling. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength.
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Figure 17. Comparison of performance reduction coefficient models. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength [46,47,48].
Figure 17. Comparison of performance reduction coefficient models. (a) Proportional limit, (b) yield strength, and (c) ultimate strength [46,47,48].
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Table 1. Chemical composition of the steel wire (%).
Table 1. Chemical composition of the steel wire (%).
IngredientsCMnSiSPCu
Atomic ratio0.75–0.850.6–0.90.12–0.32<0.025<0.025<0.200
Table 2. Groups of specimens.
Table 2. Groups of specimens.
Group NameGrade
(MPa)
Initial Stress
(MPa)
The Maximum TemperatureCooling MethodTotal Number
20 °C300 °C400 °C500 °C600 °C
A1860033333Nature15
18633333Nature15
B1960033333Nature15
19633333Nature15
784555//Nature15
784555//Water15
C2100033333Nature15
21033333Nature15
840555//Nature15
Table 3. Mechanical properties of 1860 MPa high-strength steel wires.
Table 3. Mechanical properties of 1860 MPa high-strength steel wires.
SpecimenT/°Cσp/MPaσp/σp0σy/MPaσy/σy0σu/MPaσu/σu0E/GPaE/E0δ/%
Normal temperature2012671.00016901.00019671.0002281.0005.542
With 10% initial stress30012550.99116370.96919480.9902170.9526.310
40011640.91915690.92818520.9422210.9695.226
50010510.83012550.74315210.7732220.9745.376
6009950.78510960.64912330.6272301.0096.074
700/(fracture)
Without initial stress30012811.01116730.99019490.9912240.9826.364
40011940.94216610.98319100.9712190.9615.531
50011220.88613840.81915790.8032371.0395.657
60010310.81411690.69212880.6552311.0136.516
Table 4. Mechanical properties of 1960 MPa high-strength steel wires.
Table 4. Mechanical properties of 1960 MPa high-strength steel wires.
SpecimenT/°Cσp/MPaσp/σp0σy/MPaσy/σy0σu/MPaσu/σu0E/GPaE/E0δ/%
Normal temperature2013361.00017281.00020331.0002301.0005.594
With 10% initial stress30013361.00017150.99220220.9952280.9916.059
40012630.94516600.96119550.9622270.9874.699
50011340.84913950.80716530.8132190.9525.256
60010270.76911430.66112590.6192220.9656.231
700/(fracture)
With 40% initial stress30011530.86313750.79615960.7852040.8876.021
40010460.78311600.67112860.6331990.8656.998
500/(fracture)
With 40% initial stress
(splash water cooling)
30012470.93314970.86616990.8362010.8744.681
40011210.83912750.73813840.6811930.8395.219
500/(fracture)
Without initial stress30014031.05017781.02920901.0282220.9656.535
40013230.99017371.00519630.9662361.0264.899
50011860.88814550.84217020.8372210.9615.929
60010990.82312320.71313580.6682260.9836.513
Table 5. Mechanical properties of 2100 MPa high-strength steel wires.
Table 5. Mechanical properties of 2100 MPa high-strength steel wires.
SpecimenT/°Cσp/MPaσp/σp0σy/MPaσy/σy0σu/MPaσu/σu0E/GPaE/E0δ/%
Normal temperature2014611.00018931.00021661.0002281.0005.633
With 10% initial stress30014701.00618620.98421550.9952230.9786.150
40014350.98217810.94121140.9762210.9694.790
50013000.89014970.79117310.7992371.0395.892
60011260.77112530.66213260.6122210.9696.224
700/(fracture)
With 40% initial stress30012360.84615050.79516650.7692060.9046.291
40010200.69811440.60412540.5791940.8517.070
500/(fracture)
Without initial stress30015241.04318890.99821851.0092391.0485.988
40014741.00918390.97121340.9852200.9655.018
50013330.91215510.81918050.8332230.9785.636
60011520.78912930.68313890.6412260.9916.427
Table 6. Standard deviation of reduction coefficients for various mechanical property indicators.
Table 6. Standard deviation of reduction coefficients for various mechanical property indicators.
SpecimenT/°C1860 MPa1960 MPa2100 MPa
σpσyσuδσpσyσuδσpσyσuδ
Normal temperature200.0070.0040.0110.0580.0110.0130.0080.0260.0060.0090.0070.029
With 10% initial stress3000.0140.0170.0100.0620.0090.0120.0140.0470.0110.0160.0120.043
4000.0200.0220.0170.0530.0230.0250.0200.0390.0240.0270.0240.036
5000.0320.0190.0150.0340.0150.0110.0280.0270.0060.0250.0060.040
6000.0140.0220.0250.0470.0210.0240.0130.0310.0220.0260.0250.020
With 40% initial stress300////0.0210.0250.0270.0430.0260.0190.0240.017
400////0.0360.0270.0380.0310.0420.0250.0360.039
With 40% initial stress
(splash water cooling)
300////0.0270.0120.0180.061////
400////0.0290.0500.0180.057////
Without initial stress3000.0240.0070.0120.0520.0210.0130.0180.0370.0270.0350.0160.039
4000.0320.0260.0210.0600.0130.0390.0190.0560.0270.0210.0180.052
5000.0160.0290.0290.0400.0300.0440.0480.0550.0270.0320.0330.041
6000.0240.0070.0120.0520.0210.0130.0180.0370.0270.0350.0160.039
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Wang, X.; Song, Y.; Guo, T.; Zhong, W.; Sun, J. Experimental Investigation on the Post-Fire Performance of Multiple-Strength-Grade Steel Wires. Buildings 2025, 15, 3183. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173183

AMA Style

Wang X, Song Y, Guo T, Zhong W, Sun J. Experimental Investigation on the Post-Fire Performance of Multiple-Strength-Grade Steel Wires. Buildings. 2025; 15(17):3183. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173183

Chicago/Turabian Style

Wang, Xin, Yongsheng Song, Tong Guo, Wen Zhong, and Jianyu Sun. 2025. "Experimental Investigation on the Post-Fire Performance of Multiple-Strength-Grade Steel Wires" Buildings 15, no. 17: 3183. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173183

APA Style

Wang, X., Song, Y., Guo, T., Zhong, W., & Sun, J. (2025). Experimental Investigation on the Post-Fire Performance of Multiple-Strength-Grade Steel Wires. Buildings, 15(17), 3183. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173183

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