Fire Resistant Design of Steel Structure

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Fire is destructive which causes injury, death and loss of property followed by negative environmental consequences. Therefore, design of structures should incorporate measures to mitigate or prevent destruction of the structure whilst safeguarding safety issues related to human occupancy.

Steel elements have relatively low resistance to elevated temperatures thus causing failure of the overall structure. The expected behaviour is dependent upon the severity of the fire, material properties and the degree of protection provided.

 

Fire resistance
The fire resistance plays an important role to ensure enough safety level of any building in case of fire. According to the European standards, this fire safety functionality is furthermore divided into three criteria based on different safety objectives that a structural member can provide. The definitions of above fire resistance criteria are:
Criterion R – load bearing capacity, which is assumed to be satisfied where the load bearing function is maintained during the required time of fire exposure
Criterion E – integrity separating function
Criterion I – thermal insulation separating function which is assumed to be satisfied where the average temperature rise over the whole of the non-exposed surface is limited to a certain level. In case of standard fire, this criterion may be assumed to be satisfied where the average temperature rise over the whole of the nonexposed surface is limited to 140 K, and the maximum temperature rise at any point of that surface does not exceed 180 K.

Fire resistance assessment of steel structure
The fire resistance of various steel members can be assessed with the help of the fire part of Eurocode 3 but it is necessary to have good knowledge about the following features:
Material properties of steel at elevated temperatures
Design approaches and tools
Partial factors for fire resistance assessment of steel structures

Material properties of steel at elevated temperatures
The steel structural fire design needs to deal with two different features, one relative to heating and another one concerning the load-bearing capacity of steel structures. In consequence, two types of material properties are necessary, that are:
Thermal properties of steel as a function of temperature
Mechanical properties of steel at elevated temperatures

Thermal properties of steel
The thermal properties of steel should be useful only for developing estimates of the thermal response of a concrete structural member.

The thermal properties of steel as a function of temperature includes the following factors:
Thermal conductivity
Specific heat
Density

Mechanical properties of steel at elevated temperatures
Structural steel begins to lose its strength and stiffness at temperatures above 300°C and eventually melts at about 1500° C. The mechanical properties of steel at temperatures above 450°C are strongly affected by creep, i.e., both stress and temperature histories influence steel deformations.

In the combined heating and deformation of steel, the total strain in this temperature range can be separated into three components:
The thermal strain
The instantaneous stress-related strain
The time-dependent creep strain

Steel properties change with temperature. For a member at a nearly uniform temperature, the critical steel temperature in defined as the temperature for which, the load bearing capacity becomes equal to the effect of the applied loads. Failure will then occur.

Design approaches and tools
The fire resistance design of steel structure concerning the one of the following three approaches given below:
• Member analysis
• Analysis of parts of the structure
• Global structural analysis

Member analysis
Member Analysis, in which each member of the structure will be assessed by considering it fully separated from other members and the connection condition with other members will be replaced by appropriate boundary conditions.

Analysis of parts of the structure
Analysis of parts of the structure, in which a part of the structure will be directly taken into account in the assessment using appropriate boundary conditions to reflect its link with other parts of the structure.

Global structural analysis
Global structural analysis, in which the whole structure will be used in the assessment. According to the fire part of Eurocode 3, three types of design methods can be used to assess the mechanical behaviour of steel structures in the fire situation in combination with different design approaches explained above.

One can use notably:
Simple calculation models: This type of design method comprises all the simple mechanical models developed for steel structural member analysis.
Advanced calculation models: This kind of design tools can be applied to all types of structures and are in general based on either finite element method or finite difference method. In modern fire safety engineering, it becomes more and more employed design approach due to the numerous advantages that it can provide.

Critical temperature method
This method is the most commonly used simple design rule for fire resistance assessment of steel structural members.

As the most common design method for fire resistance assessment of steel structures remains the critical temperature method, it is very useful for all designers to get an accurate idea about the details of this design method.

The step-by-step calculation procedure taking account of all necessary parameters for determination of the critical temperature of a considered steel member can be summarized as follows:
Step 1: Determination of applied design load to a steel member in the fire situation
Step 2: Classification of the steel member under the fire situation
Step 3: Calculation of design load-bearing capacity of the steel member at instant 0 of fire
Step 4: Determination of degree of utilization of the steel member
Step 5: Calculation of critical temperature of the steel member
Step 6: Calculation of the section factor of steel members
Step 7: Calculation of the heating of steel members

According to Eurocodes, the design values of the mechanical material properties Xfi,d are defined as follows:
Xfi,d= kθXk / γM,fi

where:
Xk is the characteristic or nominal value of a mechanical material property for normal temperature design.
Kθ is the reduction factor for a mechanical material property Xfi,d /Xk, dependent on the material temperature.
γM,fi is the partial factor for the relevant material property, for the fire situation.

Calculation of parameters for fire resistance
Calculation of the section factor of steel members and correction factor for shadow effect. The section factor is defined as the ratio between the perimeter through which heat is transferred to steel and the ‘steel volume. In addition, the following (conventional) rules apply:
For box protection, the steel perimeter is taken equal to the bounding box of the steel profile
For steel sections under a concrete slab, the heat exchange between steel and concrete is ignored.

Conclusion
The fire-resistant method is a new simplified approach based on Eurocode 3 part 1 and 2 which gives simple design basis by considering the various parameters for the fire-resistant design of steel structure are discussed.

The heating up of a structural element depends on the type of element (e.g., pure steel or composite steel/concrete) and of the nature and amount of fire protection. To know the temperature of the structural elements as a function of time, it is necessary to calculate the heat flux to these elements. The material properties, design approaches, design methods and design parameters according to fire resistance criteria followed by European standards are presented.

(Contributed by: Dr. Gulshan Taj M. N. A, Associate Professor, & B. Santhiya, ME Structural Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering Dhirajlal Gandhi College of Technology, Salem)