Oil and Gas Structures: Forecasting the Fire Resistance of Steel Structures with Fire Protection under Hydrocarbon Fire Conditions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Nominal Temperature–Time Curves and Fire Protection
- “dry” substances as structural protection with boards;
- “wet” substances as plasters, impregnations, and flame retardants;
- intumescent substances such as paints and coatings.
1.2. Limit States of Structures and Predictive Model with Fire Protection
1.3. Concept for Optimization of Fire Protection
- ▪
- adequacy of dependencies CΣ({pj}) and θa({pj}, treq) (formed for various categories of protective materials), determined by the completeness and quality of the statistical and/or experimental data used;
- ▪
- effectiveness of the computational algorithm assigned to implement the model in accordance with the structure of the generated dependencies.
1.4. Review of Research on Predicting the Fire Resistance of Structures under Different Fire Exposure
1.5. Aims and Objectives of this Study
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Experimental Studies
2.1.1. Decks and Bulkheads
2.1.2. Columns
2.2. Modeling Method
- -
- equation of heat conduction
- -
- initial condition
- -
- boundary condition on the surface of the inverse heat conduction task at x ≤ dp
- -
- boundary condition on the inner surface of the fireproof coating at x = 0
3. Discussion and Results
3.1. The Analysis of the GAPS Report [33,34] and Data Provided in the Standards
3.2. Steel Decks and Bulkheads with Mineral Wool Fire Protection
- -
- H-60 bulkhead: two layers of mineral wool, each 60/125 mm thick, density 150 kg/m3
- -
- A-60 bulkhead: two layers of mineral wool, each 60/85 mm thick, density 100 kg/m3.
3.3. Fire-Retardant Plasters and Epoxy Coatings
3.4. Fire Protection System with Basalt and Ceramic Fibers (Non-Combustible Covers)
3.5. Portland Cement-Based Fireproofing Boards
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Material | ASTM E-119 Ratings (min)—S-Curve | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 45 | 60 | 90 | 120 | 150 | 180 | 240 | 300 | 360 | |
Corresponding Rating For UL 1709 (min)—H-curve | ||||||||||
Intumescent Epoxy 1 | 39 | 52 | 72 | 125 | ||||||
Ceramic Mat | 98 | 154 | ||||||||
Magnesiumoxychloride | 35 | 60 | 90 | 150 | 240 | |||||
Intumescent Epoxy 2 | 62 | 90 | 115 | 138 | 240 | |||||
Cement Panels | 148 | |||||||||
GAPS Normal Concrete | 158 | 350 | ||||||||
GAPS Light Concrete | 225 | 355 |
Sample | Structure | Fire Protection, Type | Fire Protection: Thickness, mm | Figure |
---|---|---|---|---|
H-60 | 70/110 mm Deck: 5 mm Stiffener: 10 mm | rock wool Density: 150 kg/m3 | exposed surface: on the level: 70 mm on stiffeners: 50 mm below stiffeners: 60 mm | |
A-60 | 65/85 mm Deck: 5 mm Stiffener: 6 mm | rock wool Density: 100 kg/m3 | unexposed surface: on the level: 60 mm on stiffeners: 25 mm below stiffeners: 60 mm |
Type | h, mm | b, mm | S, mm | t, mm | R, mm | F, cm2 | Ix, cm4 | Iy, cm4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
20B1 | 200 | 100 | 5.6 | 8.5 | 12 | 28.49 | 1943 | 142.3 |
I40 | 383 | 299 | 9.5 | 12.5 | 22 | 112.91 | 30,556 | 5575.4 |
I30K1 | 298 | 299 | 9.0 | 14.0 | 18 | 110.8 | 18,848 | 6241 |
Sample | Structure | Fire Protection | Thickness, mm | Fire |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 1.1 | I40: A/V = 134 m−1, H = 2700 mm | Plaster coating | 32 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 1.2 | I40: A/V = 134 m−1, H = 2700 mm | Plaster coating | 32 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 1.3 | I40: A/V = 134 m−1, H = 2700 mm | Plaster coating | 32 mm | H-curve |
Sample | Structure | Fire Protection | Thickness, mm | Fire |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 2.1 | I50B2: A/V = 172 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 9.20 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 2.2 | I50B2: A/V = 172 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 8.40 mm | H-curve |
Sample No. 2.3 | I14B1: A/V = 408 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 10.30 mm | H-curve |
Sample No. 2.4 | I14B1: A/V = 408 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 14.44 mm | H-curve |
Sample No. 2.5 | I14B1: A/V = 408 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 6.30 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 2.6 | I14B1: A/V = 408 m−1, H = 1700 mm | epoxy coating | 8.75 mm | S-curve |
Sample | Structure | Fire Protection | Thickness, mm | Fire |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 3.1 | I20B1: A/V = 294 m−1, H = 1700 mm | MIX PROPLATE | 15 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 3.2 | I20B1: A/V = 294 m−1, H = 1700 mm | MIX PROPLATE | 15 mm | H-curve |
Sample No. 3.3 | I20B1: A/V = 294 m−1, H = 1700 mm | MIX PROPLATE | 50 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 3.4 | I20B1: A/V = 294 m−1, H = 1700 mm | MIX PROPLATE | 50 mm | H-curve |
Sample No. 3.5 | I40: A/V = 134 m−1, H = 1700 mm | MIX PROPLATE | 50 mm | S-curve |
Sample | Structure | Fire Protection | Thickness, mm | Fire |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 4.1 | I30K1: A/V = 157 m−1, H = 1700 mm | “Pyrosafe-Austover T” | 40 mm | S-curve |
Sample No. 4.2 | I30K1: A/V = 157 m−1, H = 1700 mm | “Pyrosafe-Austover T” | 40 mm | H-curve |
Name of the Value | Value | Information Source |
---|---|---|
Convection heat transfer coefficient with hydrocarbon temperature regime, W/(m2K) | 50 | [14] |
Convection heat transfer coefficient with standard temperature regime, W/(m2K) | 25 | [14] |
Surface absorption coefficient | 0.5 | [45] |
Initial ambient temperature, °C | 20 | - |
Sample | s, mm | ρ, kg/m3 | S-Curve, min | H-Curve, min | K = S/H |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
H-60 | 70/110 | 150 | 78 * | 60 | 1.30 |
A-60 | 60/85 | 100 | 60 | 37 * | 1.62 |
Sample | S-Curve, min | H-Curve, min | K = S/H |
---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 1.1 | 195 | 124 * | 1.56 |
Sample No. 1.2 | 183 | 118 * | |
Sample No. 1.3 | 187 * | 120 |
Sample | Thickness, mm | S-Curve, min | H-Curve, min | K = S/H |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 2.1 | 9.20 mm | 120 | - | 1.26 |
Sample No. 2.2 | 8.40 mm | 95 | ||
Sample No. 2.3 | 10.30 mm | cracked | 65 | |
Sample No. 2.4 | 14.44 mm | - | 125 | 1.71 * |
Sample No. 2.5 | 6.30 mm | 93 | - | |
Sample No. 2.6 | 8.75 mm | 123 | - |
Sample | Ap/V | s, mm | S-Curve, min | H-Curve, min | K = S/H |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 3.1, 3.2 | 294 | 15 | 60 | 30 | 2.0 |
Sample No. 3.3, 3.4 | 294 | 50 | 130 | 93 | 1.44 |
Sample No. 3.5 | 134 | 50 | 180 | 130 * | 1.38 |
T, °C | 25 | 100 | 200 | 300 | 400 | 500 | 700 | 800 | 1000 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
λ, W/K·m | 0.18 0.257 * | 0.14 - | 0.12 - | 0.11 | 0.09 | 0.08 | 0.09 | 0.12 | 0.25 |
C, J/kgK | 750/732 * | 800/1068 * | 815/1219 * | 830/1164 * | 840 | 850 | 870 | 880 | 910 |
Sample | Thickness, mm | Critical Temperature | S-Curve, min | H-Curve, min | K = S/H |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sample No. 4.1 | 40 | T = 632 °C | 247 | - | 1.34 |
Sample No. 4.2 | 40 | T = 715 °C | - | 184 |
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Gravit, M.; Dmitriev, I.; Shcheglov, N.; Radaev, A. Oil and Gas Structures: Forecasting the Fire Resistance of Steel Structures with Fire Protection under Hydrocarbon Fire Conditions. Fire 2024, 7, 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7060173
Gravit M, Dmitriev I, Shcheglov N, Radaev A. Oil and Gas Structures: Forecasting the Fire Resistance of Steel Structures with Fire Protection under Hydrocarbon Fire Conditions. Fire. 2024; 7(6):173. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7060173
Chicago/Turabian StyleGravit, Marina, Ivan Dmitriev, Nikita Shcheglov, and Anton Radaev. 2024. "Oil and Gas Structures: Forecasting the Fire Resistance of Steel Structures with Fire Protection under Hydrocarbon Fire Conditions" Fire 7, no. 6: 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7060173