Abstract

This paper reports experimental and theoretical result derived from research on steel structural elements’ fire-protection with intumescent paint. The experimental results were obtained by means of an original testing bench, briefly described below and some basic cases, i.e., horizontally and vertically disposed, massive and square-tubular cross-sectioned, reduced-scale straight bars heated at one end. By means of the thermocouples mounted along the bars, the temperature distribution laws were monitored, depending on the heated end’s nominal temperature. The paper describes an original approach to the temperature distribution evaluation by means of some new parameters, based on the temperature distribution laws experimentally obtained with reduced-scale models. We involved the least-square method (LSM) and the curve-fitting one in order to obtain a more accurate temperature distribution law compared to the experimentally obtained ones. We also introduced some new parameters in order to define the amount of heat loss in a more accurate way. Based on the results obtained, the authors suggest that this approach to the temperature distribution law can be efficiently applied in further thermal analyses, for both 2D and 3D structures. The paper also includes a thorough analysis of “m” variation along the square-tubular-cross-section, reduced-scale straight bars, and similar new approaches are proposed by the authors. The sub-goals of this investigation were (1) to obtain useful correlations between the magnitudes of the massivity ζ=P/A and the parameter “m” along the bar, and (2) to analyze, on reduced-scale models, the heat distribution laws on unprotected and intumescent-paint-protected 2D and 3D steel structures.

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