Analysis of the Thermomechanical Response of Structural Cables Subject to Fire

Cable-supported structures such as bridges and stadia are critical for the surrounding community and the consequences arising from a major fire event can be substantial. Previous computational studies into the thermal response of cables often employed simplistic heat transfer models that assumed lum...

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Published inFire technology Vol. 56; no. 2; pp. 515 - 543
Main Authors Kotsovinos, Panagiotis, Atalioti, Athina, McSwiney, Neil, Lugaresi, Francesca, Rein, Guillermo, Sadowski, Adam J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.03.2020
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN0015-2684
1572-8099
1572-8099
DOI10.1007/s10694-019-00889-7

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Summary:Cable-supported structures such as bridges and stadia are critical for the surrounding community and the consequences arising from a major fire event can be substantial. Previous computational studies into the thermal response of cables often employed simplistic heat transfer models that assumed lump capacitance or cross-sectional homogeneity without proof of validity. This paper proposes a methodology for calculating the thermal response of a cable cross-section allowing for heat transfer by conduction through each strand contact surface and radiation across inter-strand cavities. The methodology has been validated against two experiments of cables subjected to radiant heating and an input sensitivity analysis has been undertaken for the heat transfer and material parameters. The approach is compared against simple heat transfer lumped methods for a parallel-strand cable where it is shown that these lumped models are not always conservative. The model is then coupled with a two-dimensional generalised plain strain model to study the likely effect of the cross-sectional temperature gradients on the mechanical response. The study considers three qualitatively different hydrocarbon jet fire scenarios, both with and without external insulation for fire protection. It is shown that the proposed methodology can reproduce realistic cross-sectional temperature distributions with up to 50% temperature difference at the cable external surface and can capture the phenomenon of load shedding in a gradually heated cable. It is also shown that assuming a lumped thermal mass neglects the possibility of moment-inducing temperature gradients which are not considered in the ambient design of cables that is driven by tensile capacities. The proposed model and its predictions contribute towards an improved understanding and a more informed structural design of cable-supported structures in fire.
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ISSN:0015-2684
1572-8099
1572-8099
DOI:10.1007/s10694-019-00889-7