This application is directed to systems and methods for preventing hose stream penetration through fire-rated wall assemblies.
Office buildings and residential buildings use fire-resistant drywall panels (also known as plasterboard, wallboard, sheetrock, gypsum board, and the like), on the interior walls of rooms. Conventional drywall panels typically comprise gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate), which is extruded between thick sheets of facer and backer paper. When positioned on a wall structure (e.g., vertical studs between an upper plate and a lower plate), the drywall panels may be painted, coated with plaster, covered with wallpaper, or otherwise decorated. The drywall panels also provide a degree of fire protection. For example, a ½-inch-thick drywall panel is considered to have a half-hour fire rating. A ⅝-inch-thick drywall panel is considered to have a one-hour fire rating. Accordingly, a person within a room formed by wall structures comprising conventional drywall panels may have a short time during which the person is protected from a fire on the outside of the room. However, the protection provided by the wall structures may be substantially reduced when the drywall panels are breached by a high-pressure hose stream from a fire suppression nozzle.
A need exists for a system and method for preventing the water from a high-pressure fire hose from penetrating a fire-rated wall assembly.
One aspect in accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein is a method that prevents hose stream penetration into an interior of an enclosure from firefighting activity in a location adjacent to the enclosure. The method forms a wall structure between the enclosure and the adjacent location. The wall structure is covered with a laminated wall panel having a noncombustible wallboard secured to a metallic sheet. Each wall panel is secured to studs of the wall structure with the metallic sheet against studs of the wall structure. The metallic sheets block water of a hose stream from penetrating into the enclosure. The wall structure may also include laminated wall panels secured to the exterior side of the wall structure. Even if the noncombustible wallboard on one of the exterior laminated panels is weakened or destroyed by a fire or by the hose stream in the location adjacent to the enclosure, the metallic sheet of the exterior laminated wall panel blocks hose penetration.
Another aspect in accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein is a method of preventing hose stream penetration into an interior of an enclosure from firefighting activity in a location adjacent to the enclosure. The method comprises forming a wall structure between the enclosure and the location adjacent to the enclosure. The wall structure has an interior side facing the interior of the enclosure and has an exterior side facing the location adjacent to the enclosure. The method attaches a first plurality of laminated wall panels to the interior side of the wall structure. Each laminated wall panel comprises a noncombustible wallboard secured to a metallic sheet. Each laminated wall panel is attached to the support studs of the wall structure with the noncombustible wallboard facing the interior of the enclosure and with the metallic sheet facing the support studs. The metallic sheets of the laminated wall panels block water of a hose stream in the location adjacent to the enclosure from penetrating the interior side of the wall structure and entering the enclosure.
In certain embodiments in accordance with this aspect, the method further comprises attaching a second plurality of the laminated wall panels to the exterior side of the wall structure with the metallic sheets of the laminated wall panels facing the support studs of the wall structure. The metallic sheets of the second plurality of laminated wall panels block water of the hose stream in the location adjacent to the enclosure from penetrating the exterior side of the wall structure even if the noncombustible wallboard on one or more of the laminated panels of the second plurality of laminated panels is weakened or destroyed by a fire or by the hose stream in the location adjacent to the enclosure.
In certain embodiments in accordance with this aspect, the enclosure is a room.
In certain embodiments in accordance with this aspect, the enclosure is a passageway that provides egress from a room.
The foregoing aspects and other aspects of this disclosure are described in detail below in connection with the accompanying drawing figures in which:
The following detailed description of embodiments of the present disclosure refers to one or more drawings. Each drawing is provided by way of explanation of the present disclosure and is not a limitation. Those skilled in the art will understand that various modifications and variations can be made to the teachings of the present disclosure without departing from the scope of the disclosure. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment can be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment.
The present disclosure is intended to cover such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. Other objects, features, and aspects of the present disclosure are disclosed in the following detailed description. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the present discussion is a description of exemplary embodiments only and is not intended as limiting the broader aspects of the present disclosure.
The second wall structure 112 is also erected between the room 100 and another location. The following description directed to the first wall structure 110 is applicable to the second wall structure.
As shown by a broken-away portion of the first wall structure 110 in
As further shown in
A second plurality of wall panels 140 are mounted on the opposing sides of the studs 120 of the first wall structure 110. In the illustrated embodiment, where the first wall structure separates two interior rooms, the second plurality of wall panels are advantageously constructed and installed in the same manner as the first plurality of wall panels. In the illustrated embodiment, the second plurality of wall panels also comprise drywall. In alternative embodiments, where the opposite side of the wall structure is exposed to the exterior, the second plurality of wall panels may have a different construction.
As described herein, the first plurality of wall panels 130 comprise the “inner wall” of the first wall structure 110. The second plurality of wall panels 140 comprise the “outer wall” of the first wall structure.
In conventional interior wall construction, the first plurality of wall panels 130 and the second plurality of wall panels 140 of the first wall structure 110 provide a modicum of fire protection for the room 100 when constructed using conventional gypsum drywall. For example, a wall structure of ½ inch drywall panels may have a fire-rating of approximately one-half hour. Substituting ⅝-inch drywall panels may result in a wall structure having a fire-rating of approximately one hour. In many situations, the specified fire ratings may provide an occupant (or occupants) of a room sufficient survival time until a fire exterior to the room is extinguished.
The foregoing fire ratings assume the integrity of the first wall structure 110 between the occupied room and the area of the fire is maintained during the rating period. However, many factors affect the integrity of the wall structure and may result in injury to or the death of the occupants of the room. One factor affecting the integrity of the wall structure is the process of fighting a fire in an area bounded by the outer wall of the wall structure. As illustrated in
In one embodiment, the first layer 310 of non-combustible board comprises a conventional wallboard, such as, for example, drywall. Such wallboard is also referred to as plasterboard, gypsum board, Sheetrock®, and the like, and is commercially available from a number of sources, such as, for example, USG Corporation of Chicago, Ill. The wallboard may also comprise cement board (e.g., Durock® cement board from USG Corporation, HardieBacker cement board from James Hardie Building Products Inc. of Chicago, Ill., or the like), magnesium oxide board, or other suitable fire-resistant materials. The wallboard has a selected thickness. For example, in one embodiment, the wallboard has a nominal thickness of ⅝ inch.
In the illustrated embodiment, the metallic sheet 320 of the panel 300 comprises steel. In the illustrated example, the steel is 14-gauge steel having a nominal thickness of approximately 0.078 inch. Although described herein as steel, other metallic sheets (e.g., aluminum) may also be used. Other gauges of steel or other metal may also be used (e.g., 20-gauge (0.0375 inch) steel). The metallic sheet and the wallboard (non-combustible board) are laminated to each other by bonding the two layers using a layer 330 of a suitable bonding material. Preferably, the bonding layer comprises an adhesive, such as, for example, epoxy, glue, or the like. The adhesive layer is advantageously sprayed, brushed or rolled onto a surface 340 of the metallic sheet. The adhesive layer can also be sprayed, brushed or rolled onto a surface of the wallboard layer. The three layers are then forced together under pressure to permanently engage the two surfaces and form the laminated panel. The bonding method is disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,768,841.
In the illustrated embodiment, the wallboard 320 of each panel 300 has a nominal width of approximately 48 inches and a nominal length of approximately 96 inches. The metallic sheet 320 may have a smaller width and a smaller length of, for example, approximately 47.5 inches by 95.5 inches to provide a border around the metallic sheet when attached to the wallboard. The lengths of the panels are chosen to span the required distances between the lower plate 122 and the upper plate 124 of the first wall structure 110 and the second wall structure 112 described above. For example, in certain embodiments, the lengths may be 8 feet. In other embodiments, the lengths may be 10 feet or 12 feet. For a wall structure having a height less than the length of an available panel, the panel may be cut to the appropriate length. For a wall structure having a height greater than the length of an available panel, an upper panel may be installed above a lower panel. In such cases, a framing cross-member (not shown) is installed between adjacent studs where the lower and upper panels are abutted to provide a location to secure the horizontal edges and to seal the gap between the lower panel and the upper panel.
When the first wall structure 410 and the second wall structures 412 are completed as illustrated in
When the first improved wall structure 410 and the second improved wall structure 412 of
Unlike the previously described conventional wall structures 110, 112, the first improved wall structure 410 and the second improved wall structure 412 are highly resistant to hose stream penetration as illustrated in
In
The previous detailed description has been provided for the purposes of illustration and description. Thus, although there have been described particular embodiments of a new and useful invention, it is not intended that such references be construed as limitations upon the scope of this invention except as set forth in the following claims.