Abstract

Fire is one of the extreme loading events that a building may experience during its service life and can have severe consequences on the safety of its occupants, first responders, and the structure. Steel framed buildings under severe fires can experience high levels of instability at a local or global level, which in turn can lead to the partial or progressive collapse of the structure. However, in current practice, fire resistance of structures is obtained without due consideration to a number of critical factors, and this is mainly due to the high level of complexity in undertaking advanced analysis of structures under fire exposure. This paper presents a parametric study on a ten-story braced steel framed building subjected to fire exposure wherein six different parameters are evaluated: fire severity, fire spread, load paths, temperature-induced creep, local instability, and analysis regime. Results from validated finite element models are utilized to evaluate the influence of the different parameters and recommend critical parameters to be incorporated in the analysis. Results show that the susceptibility of fire-induced progressive collapse significantly depends on the severity of the fire exposure scenario, including fire intensity, fire spread, and extent of burning. Also, accounting for the full effects of transient creep in fire-induced progressive collapse analysis is needed to obtain conservative failure times under severe to very intense fire exposure. Additionally, results from the parametric study infer that the sectional classification of a steel section based on local instability can alter under fire exposure and this effect is more critical in steel columns located in the higher stories of the building; a nonslender column at ambient conditions can transform to a slender section at elevated temperatures. This can induce temperature-induced local instability in the column and lead to an early onset of instability at member and structural levels.

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