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Fire spread in a large compartment with exposed cross-laminated timber and open ventilation conditions: #FRIC-02 - Exposed wall and ceiling

Abstract

Cross-laminated timber (CLT) is becoming increasingly popular due to its many advantages. However, it has been shown that exposed CLT can have a significant effect on fire dynamics and spread rates. Further studies are therefore needed to better understand the impact of CLT to fire safety. Two large-scale CLT compartment fire experiments (95 m2) representing a modern office building have been performed, #FRIC-01 and #FRIC-02. This paper presents the second experiment, #FRIC-02, with exposed CLT on the back wall and the ceiling. The fire developed fast and spread across the room in less than 3.5 min from ignition of the wood crib on the floor and in 1.5 min after the ignition of the ceiling. Large external flames were observed, despite the compartment being well-ventilated. The 5-layer CLT, which comprised a 40 mm thick exposed outer layer and was face-bonded using a common European polyurethane adhesive, exhibited glue-line integrity failure and led to a second flashover after a significant period of decay. Subsequent layers of 20 mm also delaminated before the fire was manually extinguished after 3 h. Compared to #FRIC-01, the fire spread rate was faster, and temperatures, charring rates, heat release rates and external flames were higher.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Andreas Sæter Bøe
  • Kathinka Leikanger
  • Daniel Brandon
  • Anne Elise Steen-Hansen
  • Ivar Ståle Ertesvåg

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Community / Architecture, Materials and Structures
  • Sweden
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • RISE Fire Research AS

Year

2023

Published in

Fire safety journal

ISSN

0379-7112

Volume

141

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository