ASHRAE OR-16-C066-2016 Understanding Fire and Smoke Damper Application Requirements.pdf
《ASHRAE OR-16-C066-2016 Understanding Fire and Smoke Damper Application Requirements.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE OR-16-C066-2016 Understanding Fire and Smoke Damper Application Requirements.pdf(8页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、 Stephen W. Duda, PE, FASHRAE, is a Senior Mechanical Engineer with Ross and a good review for the more experienced. INTRODUCTION Anecdotally, some HVAC engineers and designers are uncertain of the requirements for fire dampers and smoke dampers, especially with regard to the difference between part
2、ition types. Some play it safe and specify fire and smoke dampers where they really are not required. Some may even find they have been over-specifying protective dampers throughout their career. So this conference paper compiles this Fire and Smoke Damper Summary for HVAC engineers and designers ba
3、sed on the 2015 International Building Code1(the 2012 edition has the same requirements, and the 2009 edition also has the same requirements but with different paragraph numbering). Most States and local jurisdictions in North America use the International Building Code, either outright or as a stat
4、e adaptation. Where the IBC is not enforced, NFPA 90A2can be used for guidance. FIRE RESISTANCE RATED CONSTRUCTION There are four types of fire-resistance rated walls. Before you can know what type (if any) fire damper to use, you first must know which of the four types of walls you have. Fire Walls
5、 Fire Walls (IBC Section 706) are major separation walls between buildings or to divide one building into separate buildings. A Fire Wall actually allows you to treat the spaces on opposite sides of the wall as totally separate buildings. These are usually three to four-hour rated, and are usually s
6、tructurally independent. You cannot run a duct or air transfer opening through a Fire Wall located on a property or lot line not at all not even with a fire damper. If you run a duct or air transfer opening through a Fire Wall located within a building, use a three-hour fire damper. This is the most
7、 restrictive of the various types of fire-rated walls, and is rather rare on most building projects. Most fire-rated walls within buildings are not this extreme. Fire Barriers Fire Barriers (IBC Section 707) are the medium-rating level of the various types of fire-rated walls. Examples include exit
8、passageway enclosures, atrium boundaries, stairwell enclosures, and separations between occupancies in a mixed-use building. These are usually two-hour rated, but there are exceptions, so check with the architect. You cannot run a duct or air transfer opening through an exit passageway enclosure or
9、stairwell enclosure (not at all; not even with a fire damper) unless that duct is for the purpose of independent stairwell pressurization. If you run a duct through other types of Fire Barriers, use a 1-hour fire damper. But there is an exception: If the fire barrier is only one-hour rated, and if t
10、he building is fully sprinklered, and if the system is fully ducted (not an air transfer opening), then you dont need a fire damper. (IBC 717.5.2, Exception #3). Shaft Enclosures Shaft Enclosures (Section 713) are a special type of Fire Barrier used to enclose shafts. These are usually two-hour rate
11、d. Shaft enclosures are not required if all of the following are true: (a) fully-sprinklered building; (b) not a hospital or prison; (c) connects only two floors and no more. In this case, use a 1-hour horizontal fire damper at the floor line. Other than the above item, shaft enclosures are required
12、 anytime a duct travels vertically floor-to-floor. A 1-hour fire damper and Class I or II smoke damper (or combination damper meeting both requirements) is required at each penetration of a shaft enclosure. Design Tip: You can avoid the fire/smoke damper at the shaft penetration if you have a vertic
13、al shaft with exhaust ducts entering the shaft on every floor (such as in a high-rise hotel or dormitory), and if you build steel sub-ducts that extend vertically upward into the vertical riser by at least 22 inches (560 mm), and if there is a continuous flow of air upward to the outdoors (e.g., the
14、 exhaust fan is on the roof and is always on). See Figure 1. In some jurisdictions, the fan must be on emergency power for this exception to qualify. If the shaft does not extend all the way to the bottom of the building, some Code officials will allow you to place a horizontal fire/smoke damper at
15、the floor level where the duct emerges from the bottom of the shaft. Others will argue this is not permissible and will instead require that the shaft be extended down into the ceiling cavity of the floor below, so that your duct can emerge from the side of the shaft with a vertical fire/smoke dampe
16、r. See Figure 2. Design Tip: Note that where horizontal fire dampers at a floor penetration are permitted, most manufacturers require that the damper be supported by and framed with a concrete floor; the dampers are not listed to be supported by gypsum board. So you must coordinate with the structur
17、al engineer to provide an opening in the concrete floor sized precisely for the damper plus space for expansion and contraction as required by the damper listing. Figure 1 22-inch (560 mm) sub-duct exception Figure 2 Shaft extension at lowest floor Fire Partitions Fire Partitions (IBC Section 708) a
18、re the minimum-rating level of the various types of fire-rated walls. Examples include corridor walls, tenant-separation walls, and walls dividing dwelling units in a multi-family housing building. They are usually one-hour rated. Note that corridor walls in most fully-sprinklered buildings are not
19、required to be rated at all (IBC 1018.1). If a given fire partition is not more than one-hour rated, and if the building is fully sprinklered, and if the system is ducted (not a transfer opening), then you dont need a fire damper (IBC 717.5.4, Exception #4). Otherwise, in non-sprinklered buildings a
20、nd/or in transfer openings, use a 1-hour fire damper. SMOKE RESISTANCE RATED CONSTRUCTION There are three types of smoke-rated walls. Before you can know what type (if any) smoke damper to use, you first must know which of the three types of smoke walls you have to address. Smoke Barriers Smoke Barr
21、iers (Section 709) are found in hospitals and prisons, and are used to completely divide a building floor into two compartments. A tell-tale sign of a smoke barrier on a hospital floor is to look for a double-egress door (a pair of opposite-swinging doors) in the corridor; that door will be on the s
22、moke barrier wall (Figure 3). Smoke barriers are a more restrictive classification than Smoke Partitions. A Class I or II smoke damper is required at each duct penetration of a smoke barrier. Smoke barriers are also automatically one-hour fire partitions, so review the relevant section above to dete
23、rmine a possible fire damper requirement. Figure 3 Smoke barrier indicated by double-egress (opposite-swing) door In a hospital, every floor that features patient care or patient sleeping rooms (as opposed to floors that are exclusively administrative or educational) must have a smoke barrier that r
24、uns straight (or reasonably close to straight) across the entire floor, from one exterior wall to the other, that divides the floor into two distinct halves. The purpose is that patients may not be mobile enough to evacuate the building very quickly in a fire. To give them additional time to exit, a
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
10000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- ASHRAEOR16C0662016UNDERSTANDINGFIREANDSMOKEDAMPERAPPLICATIONREQUIREMENTSPDF

链接地址:http://www.mydoc123.com/p-455789.html