Abstract

Any opening in the exterior of structures are critical when exposed to fire. Windows and doors may be open, ventilation openings may be unprotected, wall cladding and roof tiles may allow flames or embers to enter cavities. Gaps may have developed over time and allow embers to settle in crevices or cavities in the structure. In fact, rarely does initial fire penetration occur right through cladding, sheets, insulation or solid walls. Penetration is most often related to openings, weak joints or cracks. There is no doubt these weak points to fire spread in construction or indoor are crucial to the outcome of exterior fire exposure whether caused by wildfire or fire in outdoor trash or neighbouring buildings. Therefore, this has been addressed by authorities, standardization bodies and industry world-wide and much progress have been made during the last decade. This paper provide overview on new standards, on codes and on various pass/fail criteria set by code or classification standards. The paper describes how new designs of fire resistant ventilating facades and roofs apply dedicated cavity fire barriers and how new standard test methods helps to improve performances. A number of different fire scenarios that elements in vented facades/constructions can be exposed to have been studied. New test standards have been developed for the last few years and are explained. Finally, this paper evaluate how different fire stop products perform in different fire scenarios and which test standards are applicable. © Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2016 Language: en

Highlights

  • Over the last decade, increasing attention has been drawn to the fire risk that openings in vented construction represent and how these should be protected.It is crucial that fire spread in building cavities is prevented

  • For ventilating fire barriers which are open at start and sealed upon heat exposure, this means that flames can penetrate the vent in the initial open state before it is completely sealed and spread through the building cavities

  • California State Fire Marshal are revising building codes. It has informed it will reference the new set of ASTM standards on wildfire protection in order to comply with a code requirement that opening protection shall resist the intrusion of flame and embers

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Over the last decade, increasing attention has been drawn to the fire risk that openings in vented construction represent and how these should be protected. Standard furnace test methods for exterior vents might provide limited proof of fire resistance These tests apply the ISO 834 standard heating curve, a situation very different from the realistic worst case fire scenarios. For ventilating fire barriers which are open at start and sealed upon heat exposure, this means that flames can penetrate the vent in the initial open state before it is completely sealed and spread through the building cavities. Secondary effects of exposure may be metal expansion against supporting construction, delamination and deflection of sandwich panels that create gaps for fire to pass cavity barriers etc

Flaming fire through window
Wildfire or fire in nearby structures
Flashover
DEVELOPMENT OF NEW CODES AND STANDARDS
Europe
USA and Australia
Full scale façade tests
CAVITY BARRIERS
OPENING PROTECTION IN FACADES
TEST METHOD
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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