Fire Resistance in Screwed and Hollow Core Wooden Elements Filled with Insulating Material
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Wall Partition Model
3. Thermal and Transient Analysis
3.1. The Finite Element Method
3.2. The Thermal Material Properties
3.3. The Boundary Conditions
- -
- Radiation and convection on the wall partition side exposed to fire, with the imposed standard fire curve from ISO 834 [11];
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- Radiation and convection on the cavity, with the temperature evolution through the curves FG_HOL_ST, FG_HOL_TS, and FG_HOL;
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- Convection on the side not exposed to fire;
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- Adiabatic or no applied conditions on the lateral edges;
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- An ambient temperature of 20 °C considered as the initial condition.
4. Results and Discussion of the Wall Partition Model
4.1. The Fire Resistance
4.2. Fire Resistance in the Models
- A
- The comparison of results between the models with and without fiberglass showed the following:
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- In the models without fiberglass, the temperatures inside the cavity were not uniform, as represented through the wooden walls inside. In these models, the temperature inside the cavity was higher at the top and lower at the bottom.
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- The models with fiberglass achieved lower temperatures inside their cavities, maintaining more uniform heating both at the top and bottom. This was due to the temperature evolution curve, presented in Figure 5, which shows the properties of the fiberglass until a temperature of 537 °C is reached. In models with fiberglass, heating inside the cavity increased until the temperature of the material reached 619.8 °C (model FG_HOL), which affected fire resistance in terms of decreasing its duration.
- B
- The comparison of results between the models with and without steel screws showed the following:
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- The models without screws maintained a constant temperature throughout the thickness of the wooden elements;
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- The models with steel screws transmitted greater heat around them, thus affecting the wooden elements;
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- The temperature in steel screws near the top increased due to the gypsum being exposed to fire, while screws on the bottom side were of lower temperatures;
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- There were no differences in the results between the use of screws with or without threading.
- C
- A comparison of the time fire resistance between all the models showed the following:
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- The fire resistance duration of the models with fiberglass decreased by 45 min as the mean, compared with that of models without insulation inside the cavities;
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- The duration of fire resistance also decreased by 71.75 min as the mean when steel screws were considered in the numerical simulation.
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- The comparison between the use of screws, with and without threads, showed a duration of only 3.5 min of fire resistance.
5. Conclusions
- -
- For the duration of fire resistance, in the numerical models filled with fiberglass, the heating inside the cavity increased until the material reached a temperature of 619.8 °C (model FG_HOL). These models had lesser fire resistance when compared to models without fiberglass inside their cavities, with a mean duration of less than 45 min. This value is noticeable due to the heat produced by the insulated material inside the cavity in permanent contact with the wood element until its degradation. The wall partition filled with fiberglass reached a duration of 223 min of fire resistance.
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- The models without fiberglass showed greater heating near the top of the model but greater resistance to heating in the lower part. The gypsum material transmitted heat into the cavities, which promoted a temperature increase through the wood elements, from the top side bordering the fire to the unexposed bottom side. Due to wood’s lower conductivity, the increased temperature on the unexposed side was lower and allowed for higher fire resistance. The wall partition without insulation material inside the cavity reached a duration of 269 min of fire resistance.
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- The steel screws in the previous models allowed them to concentrate greater heat and thus distribute greater heat around them to the wooden elements. The use of steel screws decreased the duration of fire resistance by 71.75 min as the mean, independent of the use of a wall partition with or without filled insulation material.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wall Partition Model Type: | Designation | Materials |
---|---|---|
Hollow cavities | HOLL | Wood and gypsum |
Hollow cavities screwed with thread | HOLL_ST | Wood, gypsum, and steel screw thread |
Hollow cavities screwed without thread | HOLL_TS | Wood, gypsum, and steel screw threadless |
Filled hollow cavities with insulation | FG_HOL | Wood, gypsum, and fiberglass |
Hollow cavities insulated and screwed with thread | FG_HOL_ST | Wood, gypsum, fiberglass, and steel screw thread |
Hollow cavities insulated and screwed without thread | FG_HOL_TS | Wood, gypsum, fiberglass, and steel screw threadless |
Temperature, °C | Density, kg/m3 | Temperature, °C | Specific Heat, kJ/kgK | Temperature, °C | Thermal Conductivity, W/mK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 7850 | 20 | 0.440 | 20 | 53.334 |
50 | 0.460 | 799–1200 | 27.393 | ||
100 | 0.488 | ||||
150 | 0.510 | ||||
200 | 0.530 | ||||
250 | 0.547 | ||||
300 | 0.565 | ||||
350 | 0.584 | ||||
400 | 0.606 | ||||
450 | 0.633 | ||||
500 | 0.667 | ||||
550 | 0.708 | ||||
600 | 0.760 | ||||
650 | 0.814 | ||||
700 | 1.008 | ||||
730 | 2.291 | ||||
735 | 5.000 | ||||
750 | 1.483 | ||||
785 | 0.875 | ||||
800 | 0.803 | ||||
825 | 0.735 | ||||
850 | 0.695 | ||||
890 | 0.657 | ||||
1200 | 0.650 |
Temperature, °C | Density, kg/m3 | Temperature, °C | Specific Heat, kJ/kgK | Temperature, °C | Thermal Conductivity, W/mK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | (1 + 0.12) * 537.6 | 20 | 1.53 | 20 | 0.12 |
99 | (1 + 0.12) * 537.6 | 99 | 1.77 | 200 | 0.15 |
120 | (1.0) * 480.0 | 100 | 13.60 | 350 | 0.07 |
200 | (1.0) * 480.0 | 120 | 13.50 | 500 | 0.09 |
250 | (0.93) * 446.4 | 121 | 2.12 | 800 | 0.35 |
300 | (0.76) * 364.8 | 200 | 2.00 | 1200 | 1.50 |
350 | (0.52) * 249.6 | 250 | 1.62 | ||
400 | (0.38) * 182.4 | 300 | 0.71 | ||
600 | (0.28) * 134.4 | 350 | 0.85 | ||
800 | (0.26) * 124.8 | 400 | 1.00 | ||
1200 | (0) * 0.0 | 600 | 1.40 | ||
800 | 1.65 | ||||
1200 | 1.65 |
Temperature, °C | Density, kg/m3 | Temperature, °C | Specific Heat, kJ/kgK | Temperature, °C | Thermal Conductivity, W/mK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 15.00 | 20 | 0.84 | 20 | 0.045 |
Temperature, °C | Density, kg/m3 | Temperature, °C | Specific Heat, kJ/kgK | Temperature, °C | Thermal Conductivity, W/mK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 889.00 | 20 | 0.95 | 20 | 0.190 |
100 | 889.00 | 100 | 0.95 | 195 | 0.190 |
170 | 737.87 | 135 | 25.00 | 155 | 0.100 |
600 | 737.87 | 170 | 0.95 | 200 | 0.103 |
750 | 700.98 | 650 | 0.95 | 400 | 0.113 |
1200 | 700.98 | 675 | 10.00 | 600 | 0.127 |
700 | 0.95 | 800 | 0.145 | ||
1200 | 0.95 | 1200 | 0.165 |
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Osório, M.; Fonseca, E.M.M.; Pereira, D. Fire Resistance in Screwed and Hollow Core Wooden Elements Filled with Insulating Material. Fire 2024, 7, 288. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7080288
Osório M, Fonseca EMM, Pereira D. Fire Resistance in Screwed and Hollow Core Wooden Elements Filled with Insulating Material. Fire. 2024; 7(8):288. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7080288
Chicago/Turabian StyleOsório, Miguel, Elza M. M. Fonseca, and Domingos Pereira. 2024. "Fire Resistance in Screwed and Hollow Core Wooden Elements Filled with Insulating Material" Fire 7, no. 8: 288. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7080288
APA StyleOsório, M., Fonseca, E. M. M., & Pereira, D. (2024). Fire Resistance in Screwed and Hollow Core Wooden Elements Filled with Insulating Material. Fire, 7(8), 288. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7080288