Preface
Foreword
List of Symbols
1.0 A Building and a Fire
2.0 Wood - a Combustible Building Material
2.1 General Characteristics of Wood
2.2 Wood Degradation by Heat Impact (By Fire)
2.2.1 Thermal Degradation of Main Wood Components
2.2.2 Wood Microscopic Structure Changes by High-Temperature Stress
2.2.3 Wood Macroscopic Structure Changes by High-Temperature Stress
2.2.4 Physical Properties of Thermally Degraded Wood
2.2.5 Mechanical Properties of Thermally Degraded Wood
2.2.5.1 Temperature Impact to Bending Strength and to Bending Modulus of Elasticity
2.2.5.2 Temperature Impact to Tension Strength and MOE at Tension Parallel to Grain
2.2.5.3 Temperature Impact to Wood Compression Properties Parallel to Grain
2.2.5.4 Temperature Effect on Shear Strength of Wood
2.2.5.5 Charring Rate Effect to Mechanical Properties of Wood in General
2.3 Fire Resistance of Wooden Structures
2.4 Eurocode 5
2.4.1 Origin and Development of Eurocode Standards Programme
2.4.2 Related European Standards
2.4.3 Design Principles
2.4.4. Examples
2.5 Conclusion
3.0 Full-Size Fire Test of a Wooden Structure
3.1 The Concept of the Full-Size Tests
3.2 Structural Fire Test Scheme of Two-Storey Building
3.3 Construction Process of the Fire-Tested Two-Storey Building
3.4 Photos of the Test Structural Fire
3.5 The Fire Assessment
3.5.1 The Fire Assessment - Ground Floor
3.5.2 The Fire Assessment - First Floor
3.5.3 The Temperature Assessment - the East External Wall
3.5.4 The Temperature Assessment - the West External Wall
3.5.5 The Temperature Assessment - the North External Wall
3.5.6 The Temperature Assessment - the South External Wall
4.0 Summary of the Experiment
About the Author: Prof. Ing. Jozef Stefko, CSs. works as professor at the Technical University in Zvolen and has a civil engineering degree. He is the author of seven expertise book publications and monographs focusing on wooden building constructions. He is also Co-author of one scientific monograph entitled "Fire Safety in Wooden Buildings". He was the chief member of several national and international research and development projects in the field of wooden building constructions.
Prof. Ing. Anton Osvald, CSc., professor, formerly working at the University of Zilina and the Technical University in Zvolen. In both workplaces, he focused on the instruction and research in fire safety. He was the principal investigator of several grant projects and the author and co-author of several scientific monographs and university textbooks. He held the position of the chairman of the international scientific conference "Wood & Fire Safety", several times.
doc. Bc. Ing. Linda Makovická Osvaldová, PhD. is Associate Professor in the Department of Fire Engineering at the Faculty of Security Engineering, University of Zilina, Slovakia. In her scientific and educational activities, she deals with the issues of testing of materials used in technological processes and in building constructions, as well as with natural materials in forest fires. She is an active member of both domestic and foreign organizations. She is a member of several editorial boards of foreign and domestic magazines. Her scientific research activities are varied and published both in indexed journals and in indexed conference. She is active in international fora where she has presented the results of various projects. From year 2016 she is in a chairman of the international scientific conference "Wood and Fire Safety".
Ing. Pavol Sedlák, Ph.D., works in the Department of Wood Constructions at the Faculty of Wood Sciences and Technology at the Technical University in Zvolen. He is committed to the instruction and research in the field of wooden building constructions and computer modelling which he practised in the research institute of DW EcoCO, Dublin, Ireland. He is the author of one scientific monograph.
Mgr. Jaroslava Stefková, Ph.D., works at the Institute of Foreign Languages at the Technical University in Zvolen. She focuses on the instruction of English for specific purposes, translations of scientific and technical publications for the area of fire safety and protection.