The effect of the failure of the steel roof on the facade concrete columns of a warehouse in fire . A study case

Resumo In many situations, the Brazilian Legislation does not require verification of roof structures in a fire, since its failure will not endanger the stability of the structure. In fire, the steel roof of an industrial building deforms by heating in geometry similar to a catenary, resulting in horizontal forces in the upper extremities of the columns. Thus, even roofs that do not constitute a frame with the columns may lead them to collapse, therefore, should be protected against fire. Due to the small dimensions of the structural elements of the roof, fire coating is uneconomical. So there is a problem in the design practice. This paper presents a procedure based on British literature, which considers the horizontal load on the columns. This horizontal load must be supported by the columns and the foundations. The aim of this paper is to detail this procedure, adapt it to Brazilian standards and apply it to a case study.

The effect of the failure of the steel roof on the facade concrete columns of a warehouse in fire.A study case

Introduction
Steel roof supported by reinforced concrete columns is common in industrial buildings and deposits.According to IT8 [1] and ABNT NBR 14432 [2], structural verification in fire is not required for many of these buildings, especially for the ground floor.In buildings where the structural verification in fire is required, the roofs verification may be exempted [1] if its structural failure does not compromise the stability of the external walls or the main structure of the building.However, this verification is necessary only when there is a risk of a fire inside a building propagating to the neighboring buildings [3,4,5,6].If there is risk of fire spread, the structural elements must be designed so as not to collapse in the event of the building roof collapsing.In the late 1970s, the Constructional Steel Research and Development Organization (CONSTRADO) studied the steel roof collapse in fire.Subsequently, the Steel Construction Institute (SCI) extended these studies, which resulted in a procedure proposed by Simms and Newman [3] and adopted herein.Initially, with the increase of temperature in the framed structures, the columns are deformed outwards due to the expansion of the beam.Later, due to the vertical deformation of the beam, the columns are drawn to the undeformed position [7].Moreover, with increasing temperatures, the formation of plastic hinge occurs in the beam mainly due to the yielding reduction at high temperatures.
As from the formation of the plastic hinge, the structural behavior of the lattice roof changes to an isostatic arch.Thus, axial efforts appear in the rafter, which, concurrently with the degradation of the material strength, cause large deformations.The frame that would initially expand out, arises a horizontal force on the top of the column, moving inwards.In this situation, the columns and the foundations must be designed to withstand these new efforts.The aim of this paper is the case study on the collapse of an industrial building in fire.This study was based on the international literature cited in [3] adapted by the authors.

Description of the structure
Figure 1 shows the industrial building studied in this paper.The span of the building is 20.0 m.The building roof is a steel lattice rafter supported on consoles connected to the reinforced concrete columns, as shown in Figure 2. The distance of the trusses is 9.0 m.The chords and the support verticals profiles are U 200 mm × 60 mm × 6.35 mm.The other verticals and the diagonals are composed of two equal legs of 2" × 3/16".The cross section of the reinforced concrete column is showed in Figure 3.The length of the column is 15.0 m, the compressive strength of concrete is 30 MPa and the concrete cover is 3.0 cm.The lattice serves as a support to a trapezoid galvanized steel tile with insulation made of rock wool and laminated plastic.The lateral closing is made of reinforced concrete panels between the columns.The thickness of the panels is 15 cm.

Overturning moment
Newman [8] developed a method to determine the horizontal force that the roof rafter applies on the top of the steel column.He considered a frame formed by the columns and by the beam.Later, Simms and Newman [3] extended the method to be used in lattice rafter and trusses.It was formerly thought that the dilation of the roof structures were responsible for the collapse of the building lateral closing.Thus, there would be a horizontal force pushing the columns outwards.Currently, after the initial dilation, due to the reduction of the steel elasticity at high temperatures, the beam is known to deform.Thus, the horizontal force pulls the columns inwards.For a roof simply supported by the columns, if there is any possibility of fire spreading outwards, affecting the neighboring buildings, the roof will apply a horizontal force on the columns before of the total collapse of the building.Thus, there will be necessary to apply the procedure described as follows.
In simply supported roof structures, there is generally a connection between the beam and the columns.It should be verified whether the connection is able to transmit the horizontal force to the columns, causing the overturning moment.According to [3], the compressive members of the trusses (ties and struts) are expected to fail in the early stages of the fire; therefore, any resistance will be provided only by the top and bottom chords of the truss, as a catenary.In this condition, the console that supports the lattice will be subject to a horizontal force H, which generates a moment at the base of the concrete column, known as overturning moment (OTM), as shown in Figure 4.The model proposed by Simms and Newman [3] was developed based on the geometry and forces acting on the collapsing rafter, as shown as Figure 5.

Figure 5
Mathematical model in collapse [3] The effect of the failure of the steel roof on the facade concrete columns of a warehouse in fire.A study case In Figure 5, R 1 is the length from end of the haunch to the apex, R 2 is the haunch length from the center line of the column, Y is the height of end haunch, F 1 is the vertical load on rafter length R 1 , F 2 is the vertical load on rafter length R 2 , V r and H r are the vertical and the horizontal reactions on the column base, H is the resulting horizontal load on rafter length R 1 , M P1 and M P2 are the fire hinge moment at the end of the haunch and at the apex, respectively, and is the rafter sag.Considering the vertical equilibrium, the vertical reaction on the column base is given by equation ( 1). (1) Taking moments of the apex, force H is given by equation ( 2). (2) Due to the failure mode of the trusses, the residual moments in the rafter is assumed to be zero and the haunch length is also equal zero [3].Furthermore, as this method ignores the bending of the chords of the trusses, the magnitude of the overturning moment will be expected to be higher than the overturning moment for portal frames.Thus, the overturning moment is given by equation ( 3), which is greater than 10% of the plastic capacity of the column [3]. (3) The force on the main rafter (F 1 ) is given by equation ( 4).

(4)
In equation ( 4), w f is the factored load in fire, S is the frame spacing and L is the span.Considering the self-weight of the lateral closing (W D ), the vertical reaction is obtained by equation ( 5). (5) Substituting equation ( 4) into (2) and considering the failure mode of the trusses, horizontal force H is obtained on the top of the column by of equation ( 6).   4) into (2), the overturning moment is given by equation ( 7).(7) Equation ( 8) provides the relation between the rafter sag angle ( θ ) and the initial rafter pitch ( 0 θ ). (8)

500 ºC isotherm method
The 500 ºC isotherm method is a simplified method for analysing concrete in fire [9].To use this method, it is firstly necessary to termine the isotherm of 500 ºC for the required time of fire exposure.
Posteriorly, the concrete area outside the 500 ºC isotherm should be excluded from the design and the remaining cross-section should be considered with the mechanical properties at the ambient temperature (as shown in Figure 6).However, the mechanical properties of the reinforcement are reduced according to the temperature of the centroid of the bar.The rounded corners of isotherms can be by approximating the real form of the isotherm to a rectangle [10].
The method is initially proposed as "550 ºC Isotherm Method" [11].The concrete resistance is not affected at temperatures below 550ºC, leaving the thermal effects only for the reinforcement.
Posteriorly, the limit-temperature was reduced to 500 ºC and the concrete area with higher temperature was neglected [12].
In Silva [10], for example, the isotherms for various sections of columns are presented in order to facilitate the manual calculation.These isotherms were performed using the ATERM software [13][14].

Thermal analysis
The thermal field in the concrete column and in the truss is carry out by the ATERM software [13][14].The structural elements are submitted by the standard fire [15][16].The fire occurs inside of the building (as shown in the Figure 1).The thermal properties adopted for the concrete and the steel were based on Brazilian standards [17][18].The humidity adopted is 1.5% in weight.
According to standards [17][18] the structures are verified for the 30 and 60 minutes exposed to the standard fire.
Based on the temperature distribution, the stability of the column is verified by the interaction diagrams between axial load and bending moments.For verifying the fire column, the 500 ºC

Figure 9
Fire expose at column (mm) Isotherms after 30 minutes of fire in column The effect of the failure of the steel roof on the facade concrete columns of a warehouse in fire.A study case isotherm method will be used as recommended in Eurocode 2 [9].

Trusses
Due the symmetry, only half of the truss was thermally analyzed.All the truss components were exposed to the standard fire.The temperature distribution after 30 and 60 minutes of fire is was observed to be practically uniform.

Columns
The thermal analysis of the concrete columns was carried out by the ATERM software [14][15].
The thermal model used includes the column and a concrete panel with 50 cm in length on each side of the column, as shown in Figure 9.The internal sides of the column and the panel were exposed to the standard fire.The thermal parameters adopted in the analyses are indicated in ABNT NBR 15200 [17].The outside of the building was exposed to ambient temperature, and the combined phenomena of convection and radiation was simulated by a convection coefficient equal to 9 W/m² °C.The model was discretized into 8400 triangular elements with 1 cm in side.Figures 10 and 11 show the isotherms after 30 and 60 minutes of standard fire.

Actions
According to ABNT NBR 8681 [19], for the exceptional actions combination, the normal design force is given by equation ( 9),

Figure 11
Isotherms after 60 minutes of fire in column where γ g is the permanent action coefficient and is 1.2 for the exceptional combination, g F are the permanent loads, γ q is the variable load coefficient and is a unitary, q,exc F are the exceptional actions, q F are the variable loads and ψ 2 is the reduction factor, which is 0.6 for the deposits [20].For the exceptional combination, the ψ 2 factor can be multiplied by 0.7 when the principal load is the fire [19].The major influence area of the column is 90 m² (see Figure 1).The column height is 15 m.A self-weight of the roof equal to 0.5 kN/m² was admitted and the live load is 0.25 kN/m²; thus, the design normal force in the column is given by equation 10. (10) In the exceptional combination, the reduction factor (ψ 2 ) for the wind is zero [19].However, when the structural members are submitted only to wind actions, in addition to the self-weight and any thermal actions, the reduction factor should be 0.2 [18].In this study, the efforts acting on the column are the dead load and the thermal action caused by the lattice and not by the column.Thus, on the safety side, the reduction factor equal to 0.2 will be used.In addition, the wind exerts a pressure equal to 0.7 kN/m², with an external pressure coefficient equal to 0.7.Thus, the wind causes a moment on the column base is 90.0 kN.m.In this situation, the truss console is submitted to a horizontal force H, which causes an overturning moment OTM on the column base.In fire, the weight of the roof steel is 0.07 kN/m² and the weight of the lattice rafter and the purling is 0.15 kN/m².Thus, the collapse load (w f ) is 0.22 kN/m².Note that, in a fire, the roof cladding materials are consumed.By the equation ( 6) and by the building geometry (see Figure 1), horizontal force H is 39.5 kN and moment OTM is 592.5 kN.m.By equation ( 5), the vertical reaction in fire is 526.05 kN.

Column structural verification
In fire, the concrete structures can be verified by the 500 ºC Isotherm Method [9].This method assumes that only the concrete area with temperatures below 500 ºC contributes to the strength capacity of the structural element.The concrete within the 500 ºC isotherm is considered to have the same mechanical properties at ambient temperature; however, the safety coefficients are unitary.The concrete area above 500 ºC is despised.The mechanical properties of the reinforcement are reduced according to the temperature at the bar centroid obtained by thermal analysis.The interaction diagram between the normal force and the bending moments (M x and M y ) is carried out by the CFF program, The effect of the failure of the steel roof on the facade concrete columns of a warehouse in fire.A study case developed by the first author.Initially, the CFF program was developed for ambient temperature and the results were compared to the TQS program [21].Thereafter, the CFF was adapted to the fire by the 500 ºC Isotherm Method.Figures 10 and 11 allow finding the concrete section with temperatures below 500 ºC after 30 and 60 minutes of fire.The reduction section is shown in Figure 12.
Table 1 shows the centroid of the reinforcement and the temperatures after 30 and 60 minutes of fire.
In this study, we considered a concrete class C30 and reinforcement CA-50 with Young´s modulus is 210000 MPa.

Conclusion
Generally, the verification of the structures in fire is not required for industrial buildings.However, when the roof collapse affects the building closing, threatening to spread the fire to neighboring buildings, fire verification should be done.In case the fire verification is necessary, the application of the anti-fire coatings on the slender roof elements is uneconomical.
To resolve this problem, we presented a calculation procedure to determine the additional efforts that the structure will undergo when the collapse state occurs.If the columns and the foundations have enough resistance to support these additional efforts, the roof structure does not require the application of anti-fire coatings.
To exemplify this procedure, a study case of an industrial building was presented.This building has a lattice roof supported by concrete columns.We concluded that the structure presents safety after the 60-minute fire.Thus, the lattice roof does not need the application of the anti-fire coating.

Figure 7 8
Figure 7Temperature distribution after 30 minutes of fire in truss

Fig- ures 7
and 8 show the temperatures distribution for the 30 and 60 minutes of fire.The thermal analyses were carried out by the ATERM software[14][15].

Figure 12
Figure 12 Reduction section by the 500 ºC isotherm after (a) 30 minutes (b) 60 minutes B B A B Figures 13 and  14  show the interaction diagram for the compressive normal force equal to 184.95 kN after 30 and 60 minutes of fire.The interaction diagram was made by the CFF program.We verified that the moment caused by horizontal force H and the wind is inside the envelopment.Note that the moment compresses the most heated bars.

Figure 13
Figure 13Interaction diagram after 30 minutes of fire

Table 1
Coordinates and temperatures of the reinforcements