Steel and Composite Structures
Volume 43, Number 4, 2022, pages 483-500
DOI: 10.12989/scs.2022.43.4.483
Fire resistance tests of LSF walls under combined compression and bending actions
Mithum Peiris and Mahen Mahendran
Abstract
Cold-formed steel wall panels sheathed with gypsum plasterboard have shown superior thermal and structural
performance in fire. Recent damage caused by fire events in Australia has increased the need for accurate fire resistance ratings
of wall systems used in low- and mid-rise construction. Past fire research has mostly focused on light gauge steel framed (LSF)
walls under uniform axial compression and LSF floors under pure bending. However, in reality, LSF wall studs may be subject
to both compression and bending actions due to eccentric loading at the wall to-roof or wall-to-floor connections. In order to
investigate the fire resistance of LSF walls under the effects of these loading eccentricities, four full-scale standard fire tests were
conducted on 3 m x 3 m LSF wall specimens lined with two 16 mm gypsum plasterboards under different combinations of axial
compression and lateral load ratios. The findings show that the loading eccentricity can adversely affect the fire resistance level
of the LSF wall depending on the magnitude of the eccentricity, the resultant compressive stresses in the hot and cold flanges of
the wall studs caused by combined loading and the temperatures of the hot and cold flanges of the studs. Structural fire designers
should consider the effects of loading eccentricity in the design of LSF walls to eliminate their potential failures in fire.
Key Words
cold-formed steel; combined compression and bending; loading eccentricity; LSF wall panels; standard fire tests
Address
Mithum Peiris and Mahen Mahendran: Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Australia