Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Waldemar Weisheim
  • Peter Schaumann
  • Lisa Sander
  • Jochen Zehfuß

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Technische Universität Braunschweig
View graph of relations

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)33-50
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Structural Fire Engineering
Volume11
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 24 Sept 2019

Abstract

Purpose: This paper aims to deal with the experimental and numerical investigations of the fire protection performance of a waterborne intumescent coating (IC) on structural steel in case of natural fires. Based on own small-scale laboratory tests, an advanced numerical model is developed to simulate the fire protection performance of the investigated coating in case of arbitrary fire scenarios. The insulation efficiency of the coating is described within the model by temperature and heating rate-dependent material properties, such as expansion factors, thermal conductivity and heat capacity. The results of the numerical model are compared to own large-scale fire tests of an unloaded I-section beam and column. Design/methodology/approach: As natural fires can show arbitrary regimes, the material properties of the waterborne IC are investigated for various heating rates. Based on these investigations, a material model for the IC is implemented in the finite element program ABAQUS. With the help of user subroutines, the material properties of the coating are introduced for both the heating and cooling phase of natural fires, allowing for two- and three-dimensional thermomechanical analyses of coated steel elements. Findings: The results of the performed small-scale laboratory tests show a heating rate-dependent behavior of the investigated coating. The mass loss as well as the expansion of the coating change with the heating rate. Moreover, the material properties obtained on small scale are valid for large scale. Therefore, a material model could be developed that is suitable to reproduce the results of the large-scale fire tests. Additionally, with the help of the numerical model, a dimensioning approach for the dry film thickness (DFT) of the investigated coating is derived for arbitrary natural fires. Research limitations/implications: The material properties presented in this paper are only valid for the investigated waterborne IC and the parameter area that was chosen. However, the developed modeling approach for the fire protection performance of ICs is general and can be applied for every coating that is part of the intumescent product family. Originality/value: Until now, only few research works have been carried out on the fire protection performance of ICs under non-standard fire exposure. This paper deals extensively with the material properties and the material modeling of a waterborne IC exposed to natural fires. Especially, the laboratory examinations and the numerical simulations are unique and allow for new evaluation possibilities of ICs.

Keywords

    Coating, Cooling, Expansion, Fire, Fire test, Heating, Intumescent, Model, Natural, Performance, Simulation, Steel, Subroutine, Waterborne

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires. / Weisheim, Waldemar; Schaumann, Peter; Sander, Lisa et al.
In: Journal of Structural Fire Engineering, Vol. 11, No. 1, 24.09.2019, p. 33-50.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Weisheim, W, Schaumann, P, Sander, L & Zehfuß, J 2019, 'Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires', Journal of Structural Fire Engineering, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 33-50. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004
Weisheim, W., Schaumann, P., Sander, L., & Zehfuß, J. (2019). Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires. Journal of Structural Fire Engineering, 11(1), 33-50. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004
Weisheim W, Schaumann P, Sander L, Zehfuß J. Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires. Journal of Structural Fire Engineering. 2019 Sept 24;11(1):33-50. doi: 10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004
Weisheim, Waldemar ; Schaumann, Peter ; Sander, Lisa et al. / Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires. In: Journal of Structural Fire Engineering. 2019 ; Vol. 11, No. 1. pp. 33-50.
Download
@article{fcc1df6dfbd64c1e86590a33296de119,
title = "Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires",
abstract = "Purpose: This paper aims to deal with the experimental and numerical investigations of the fire protection performance of a waterborne intumescent coating (IC) on structural steel in case of natural fires. Based on own small-scale laboratory tests, an advanced numerical model is developed to simulate the fire protection performance of the investigated coating in case of arbitrary fire scenarios. The insulation efficiency of the coating is described within the model by temperature and heating rate-dependent material properties, such as expansion factors, thermal conductivity and heat capacity. The results of the numerical model are compared to own large-scale fire tests of an unloaded I-section beam and column. Design/methodology/approach: As natural fires can show arbitrary regimes, the material properties of the waterborne IC are investigated for various heating rates. Based on these investigations, a material model for the IC is implemented in the finite element program ABAQUS. With the help of user subroutines, the material properties of the coating are introduced for both the heating and cooling phase of natural fires, allowing for two- and three-dimensional thermomechanical analyses of coated steel elements. Findings: The results of the performed small-scale laboratory tests show a heating rate-dependent behavior of the investigated coating. The mass loss as well as the expansion of the coating change with the heating rate. Moreover, the material properties obtained on small scale are valid for large scale. Therefore, a material model could be developed that is suitable to reproduce the results of the large-scale fire tests. Additionally, with the help of the numerical model, a dimensioning approach for the dry film thickness (DFT) of the investigated coating is derived for arbitrary natural fires. Research limitations/implications: The material properties presented in this paper are only valid for the investigated waterborne IC and the parameter area that was chosen. However, the developed modeling approach for the fire protection performance of ICs is general and can be applied for every coating that is part of the intumescent product family. Originality/value: Until now, only few research works have been carried out on the fire protection performance of ICs under non-standard fire exposure. This paper deals extensively with the material properties and the material modeling of a waterborne IC exposed to natural fires. Especially, the laboratory examinations and the numerical simulations are unique and allow for new evaluation possibilities of ICs.",
keywords = "Coating, Cooling, Expansion, Fire, Fire test, Heating, Intumescent, Model, Natural, Performance, Simulation, Steel, Subroutine, Waterborne",
author = "Waldemar Weisheim and Peter Schaumann and Lisa Sander and Jochen Zehfu{\ss}",
note = "Funding information: The work presented in this paper is part of the German research project “Test procedures for thermal material properties of fire protection claddings and intumescent coatings for the design of steel structures exposed to natural fires” (in German: “Pr{\"u}fverfahren f{\"u}r thermische Materialkennwerte von Brandschutzbekleidungen und reaktiven Brandschutzsystemen f{\"u}r die Bemessung von Stahltragwerken bei Naturbr{\"a}nden”) (AiF 19176 N). The authors express their deep gratitude for the financial support received from the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy.",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "33--50",
number = "1",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Numerical model for the fire protection performance and the design of intumescent coatings on structural steel exposed to natural fires

AU - Weisheim, Waldemar

AU - Schaumann, Peter

AU - Sander, Lisa

AU - Zehfuß, Jochen

N1 - Funding information: The work presented in this paper is part of the German research project “Test procedures for thermal material properties of fire protection claddings and intumescent coatings for the design of steel structures exposed to natural fires” (in German: “Prüfverfahren für thermische Materialkennwerte von Brandschutzbekleidungen und reaktiven Brandschutzsystemen für die Bemessung von Stahltragwerken bei Naturbränden”) (AiF 19176 N). The authors express their deep gratitude for the financial support received from the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy.

PY - 2019/9/24

Y1 - 2019/9/24

N2 - Purpose: This paper aims to deal with the experimental and numerical investigations of the fire protection performance of a waterborne intumescent coating (IC) on structural steel in case of natural fires. Based on own small-scale laboratory tests, an advanced numerical model is developed to simulate the fire protection performance of the investigated coating in case of arbitrary fire scenarios. The insulation efficiency of the coating is described within the model by temperature and heating rate-dependent material properties, such as expansion factors, thermal conductivity and heat capacity. The results of the numerical model are compared to own large-scale fire tests of an unloaded I-section beam and column. Design/methodology/approach: As natural fires can show arbitrary regimes, the material properties of the waterborne IC are investigated for various heating rates. Based on these investigations, a material model for the IC is implemented in the finite element program ABAQUS. With the help of user subroutines, the material properties of the coating are introduced for both the heating and cooling phase of natural fires, allowing for two- and three-dimensional thermomechanical analyses of coated steel elements. Findings: The results of the performed small-scale laboratory tests show a heating rate-dependent behavior of the investigated coating. The mass loss as well as the expansion of the coating change with the heating rate. Moreover, the material properties obtained on small scale are valid for large scale. Therefore, a material model could be developed that is suitable to reproduce the results of the large-scale fire tests. Additionally, with the help of the numerical model, a dimensioning approach for the dry film thickness (DFT) of the investigated coating is derived for arbitrary natural fires. Research limitations/implications: The material properties presented in this paper are only valid for the investigated waterborne IC and the parameter area that was chosen. However, the developed modeling approach for the fire protection performance of ICs is general and can be applied for every coating that is part of the intumescent product family. Originality/value: Until now, only few research works have been carried out on the fire protection performance of ICs under non-standard fire exposure. This paper deals extensively with the material properties and the material modeling of a waterborne IC exposed to natural fires. Especially, the laboratory examinations and the numerical simulations are unique and allow for new evaluation possibilities of ICs.

AB - Purpose: This paper aims to deal with the experimental and numerical investigations of the fire protection performance of a waterborne intumescent coating (IC) on structural steel in case of natural fires. Based on own small-scale laboratory tests, an advanced numerical model is developed to simulate the fire protection performance of the investigated coating in case of arbitrary fire scenarios. The insulation efficiency of the coating is described within the model by temperature and heating rate-dependent material properties, such as expansion factors, thermal conductivity and heat capacity. The results of the numerical model are compared to own large-scale fire tests of an unloaded I-section beam and column. Design/methodology/approach: As natural fires can show arbitrary regimes, the material properties of the waterborne IC are investigated for various heating rates. Based on these investigations, a material model for the IC is implemented in the finite element program ABAQUS. With the help of user subroutines, the material properties of the coating are introduced for both the heating and cooling phase of natural fires, allowing for two- and three-dimensional thermomechanical analyses of coated steel elements. Findings: The results of the performed small-scale laboratory tests show a heating rate-dependent behavior of the investigated coating. The mass loss as well as the expansion of the coating change with the heating rate. Moreover, the material properties obtained on small scale are valid for large scale. Therefore, a material model could be developed that is suitable to reproduce the results of the large-scale fire tests. Additionally, with the help of the numerical model, a dimensioning approach for the dry film thickness (DFT) of the investigated coating is derived for arbitrary natural fires. Research limitations/implications: The material properties presented in this paper are only valid for the investigated waterborne IC and the parameter area that was chosen. However, the developed modeling approach for the fire protection performance of ICs is general and can be applied for every coating that is part of the intumescent product family. Originality/value: Until now, only few research works have been carried out on the fire protection performance of ICs under non-standard fire exposure. This paper deals extensively with the material properties and the material modeling of a waterborne IC exposed to natural fires. Especially, the laboratory examinations and the numerical simulations are unique and allow for new evaluation possibilities of ICs.

KW - Coating

KW - Cooling

KW - Expansion

KW - Fire

KW - Fire test

KW - Heating

KW - Intumescent

KW - Model

KW - Natural

KW - Performance

KW - Simulation

KW - Steel

KW - Subroutine

KW - Waterborne

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073969820&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004

DO - 10.1108/JSFE-01-2019-0004

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85073969820

VL - 11

SP - 33

EP - 50

JO - Journal of Structural Fire Engineering

JF - Journal of Structural Fire Engineering

SN - 2040-2317

IS - 1

ER -