Steel Structure

Fire Protection Materials for Steel Structures: Coatings, Encasements & Fire Resistance Ratings

Intumescent coatings, cementitious sprays, board encasements, and fire resistance ratings. Learn how to select fire protection materials for steel structures based on building codes and project requirements.

Steel is strong. But steel has one critical weakness: fire.

At approximately 550°C (1000°F), steel loses half of its yield strength. At 600°C, it loses two-thirds. Unprotected steel columns can fail in as little as 15-20 minutes under fire conditions-9. This is why building codes worldwide require fire protection for structural steel.

For overseas clients, understanding fire protection materials is not just about compliance—it is about life safety, property protection, and project approval.

This guide covers:

  • Why steel needs fire protection.
  • Intumescent (thin-film) coatings.
  • Cementitious (thick-film) coatings.
  • Board and blanket encasement systems.
  • Fire resistance ratings and code requirements.
  • Material selection by project type.

1. Why Steel Requires Fire Protection

Steel does not burn, but it loses strength rapidly as temperature rises.

TemperatureStrength RemainingBehavior
20°C (ambient)100%Normal
200°C~90%Minimal loss
400°C~70%Significant reduction
550°C~50%Critical – design strength often exceeded
600°C~33%Imminent failure
800°C~10%Collapse

The problem: A typical building fire reaches 800-1000°C within 30-60 minutes. Without protection, steel structures collapse rapidly-1.

Fire protection works by:

  • Insulating: Slowing heat transfer to steel (cementitious coatings, boards).
  • Reflecting: Forming a char layer that insulates (intumescent coatings).
  • Sacrificial: Absorbing heat through chemical reactions (water release in gypsum).

2. Fire Resistance Ratings

Fire resistance is measured in hours – the time a protected steel element can withstand a standard fire test without exceeding critical temperature (typically 538°C average or 593°C single point)-2.

Common fire resistance ratings:

Rating (hours)Typical Application
0.5h (30 min)Secondary elements, single-story warehouses (some codes)
1.0h (60 min)Standard industrial buildings, offices, multi-story
1.5h (90 min)High-rise buildings, schools, hospitals
2.0h (120 min)Critical infrastructure, high-occupancy buildings
3.0h (180 min)Special applications, tunnels, petrochemical

Reference benchmark (GB 50016 / IBC equivalents):

Building TypeColumnBeamFloor
Low-rise industrial (2 stories)1.5-2.0h1.0-1.5h1.0-1.5h
Multi-story office (4-8 stories)2.0-2.5h1.5-2.0h1.5-2.0h
High-rise (>24m)2.5-3.0h2.0-2.5h2.0-2.5h

Always verify with local building codes (IBC, Eurocode, GB 50016).

3. Intumescent (Thin-Film) Fire Protection Coatings

Intumescent coatings are thin-film systems that expand when heated, forming a thick insulating char layer (typically 30-50× original thickness)-3.

PropertyDescription
Typical thickness0.5 – 3.0 mm (dry film)
MechanismExpands (intumesces) under heat, forming insulating foam-like char
AppearanceSmooth, paintable finish (architectural)
Fire rating achievableUp to 2.0 hours (some products up to 3.0h)
Best forArchitecturally exposed steel (visible columns/beams)

Subtypes:

TypeThicknessFire RatingBest For
Ultra-thin (<1mm)0.5-1.0mm0.5-1.5hInterior, architectural
Thin (1-2mm)1.0-2.0mm1.0-2.0hGeneral interior steel
High-build (2-3mm)2.0-3.0mm1.5-2.0hHigher rating requirements

Advantages:

  • Aesthetic (smooth finish, can be top-coated in any color).
  • Low weight (adds minimal load to structure).
  • Fast application (spray equipment).
  • Suitable for complex shapes (open web joists, trusses).

Disadvantages:

  • Higher material cost per mm thickness.
  • Requires clean, primed surface (Sa2.5 blast).
  • Not suitable for high humidity or outdoor without qualified topcoat.
  • Performance varies with formulation (water-based vs. solvent-based).

Water-Based vs. Solvent-Based Intumescent:

FeatureWater-BasedSolvent-Based
VOCLowHigh
ApplicationEasier, faster dryRequires ventilation
AppearanceGoodVery good (smoother)
StorageFreeze-sensitiveFlammable
CostModerateHigher

Best for: Visible structural steel, office buildings, airports, stadiums, retail spaces.

4. Cementitious (Thick-Film) Fire Protection Coatings

Cementitious coatings are thick-film systems composed of cement binders mixed with lightweight aggregates (vermiculite, perlite, or mineral wool)-1.

PropertyDescription
Typical thickness8 – 50 mm
MechanismInsulation (low thermal conductivity)
AppearanceRough, textured (industrial)
Fire rating achievable1.0 – 3.0+ hours
Best forConcealed steel, industrial buildings, parking garages

Thickness vs. Fire Rating (Typical – varies by product):

Fire RatingApproximate Thickness
1.0 hour8-15 mm
1.5 hours15-22 mm
2.0 hours22-30 mm
2.5 hours30-38 mm
3.0 hours38-50 mm

Subtypes:

TypeDensityFire RatingBest For
Vermiculite-basedLow1.0-2.0hGeneral industrial
Perlite-basedLow-Medium1.5-2.5hHigher ratings
Mineral fiber-reinforcedMedium2.0-3.0hHeavy industrial, petrochemical

Advantages:

  • Lowest material cost per mm of protection.
  • Excellent insulation properties.
  • Good for high fire rating requirements (2-3 hours).
  • Fire resistance well-understood with established calculation methods-1.
  • Can achieve very long ratings (3+ hours).

Disadvantages:

  • Rough, industrial appearance (not architectural).
  • Heavy (adds load to structure).
  • Thick coating hides detail (not for exposed connections).
  • Slower application (multiple passes required).
  • Susceptible to damage (impact and abrasion).
  • Not suitable for high-humidity or outdoor without sealant.

Best for: Industrial buildings, warehouses (concealed steel), parking garages, utility plants, back-of-house areas.

5. Board & Blanket Encasement Systems

Rigid boards or flexible blankets are mechanically attached to steel sections.

Material TypeFormFire RatingBest For
Calcium silicate boardRigid board1.0-3.0hHigh durability, architectural
Gypsum board (plasterboard)Rigid board1.0-2.0hInterior, low cost
Mineral wool / rock fiber blanketFlexible blanket1.0-2.0hIrregular shapes, retrofit
Cementitious boardRigid board1.5-3.0hHigh impact areas

Board Encasement:

  • Boards cut to size, attached with adhesives, screws, or steel pins.
  • Corners reinforced with metal angles.
  • Provides smooth, paintable finish.

Blanket Encasement:

  • Mineral wool wrapped around steel, secured with wire mesh and pins.
  • Suitable for complex shapes (trusses, pipes).
  • Lower cost than boards but less durable.

Advantages:

  • Dry installation (no curing time).
  • Very durable (boards resist impact).
  • Excellent insulation properties.
  • Can achieve very high ratings (3+ hours).
  • No skilled spray applicator required.

Disadvantages:

  • Labor-intensive (cutting and fitting).
  • Requires detailing at connections and penetrations.
  • Adds significant volume (increases column size).
  • Higher material cost than coatings.

Best for: High-durability requirements, petrochemical plants (jet fire resistance-10), tunnels, retrofit projects, areas with high impact risk.

6. Comparison: Intumescent vs. Cementitious vs. Board

FactorIntumescent (Thin)Cementitious (Thick)Board/Blanket
AppearanceSmooth, paint-gradeRough, industrialSmooth (board) / Matt (blanket)
Thickness0.5-3mm8-50mm12-50mm
WeightVery lowMediumMedium-High
Fire rating max2.0h (some 3.0h)3.0h+3.0h+
Material costHigh per mmLow per mmMedium-High
Installation speedFast (spray)ModerateSlow (labor)
Durability (impact)LowMediumHigh (board)
Suitable for outdoorYes (with topcoat)No (unless sealed)Yes (board)
Typical applicationVisible steelConcealed steelHigh durability

7. Specialized Fire Protection Materials

A. Gypsum-Based Plasters

Gypsum releases chemically bound water when heated (endothermic reaction). This removes heat from the fire, slowing steel temperature rise-5.

Advantages: Excellent fire performance (up to 2.0h), lower density than cementitious.
Disadvantages: Not for high humidity or outdoor (gypsum degrades).

B. Calcium Silicate-Based Materials

Calcium silicate boards and plasters provide good fire resistance with better moisture resistance than gypsum-5.

Advantages: More durable than gypsum, good for light industrial.
Disadvantages: Higher cost than gypsum.

C. Epoxy Intumescent (High-Performance)

Two-component epoxy intumescent coatings provide the highest durability for extreme environments (offshore, petrochemical, jet fire exposure-10).

Advantages: Excellent durability, chemical resistance, jet fire rating.
Disadvantages: Very high cost, requires specialized application.

D. Integrated Cladding-Fire Protection Materials

Emerging materials combine thermal insulation (building envelope) with fire protection-6. Examples: autoclaved lightweight concrete (ALC) panels, lightweight insulating mortar.

Advantage: Two functions in one material.
Disadvantage: Limited track record; consult manufacturer data.

8. Selection by Building Type & Environment

Building TypeVisibilityEnvironmentRecommended Protection
Warehouse (standard)Concealed (ceiling)DryCementitious (thick-film) – lowest cost
Office buildingVisible (columns exposed)DryIntumescent (thin-film) – architectural finish
Airport / StadiumHighly visibleDryIntumescent (water-based) + topcoat
Industrial plantConcealed / mixedDusty, humidCementitious or Board
Parking garageVisible but utilitarianHumid, salt (winter)Cementitious (sealed) or Intumescent (qualified for outdoor)
Petrochemical / OffshoreMixedExtreme, jet fire riskEpoxy intumescent or Cementitious board-10
Cold storageConcealedFreezing, condensationCementitious (vapor barrier required)
Retrofit / HistoricVisibleDryIntumescent (thin) or Board (if impact resistant)

9. Fire Protection for Connections & Fasteners

A critical requirement often overlooked: fire protection for connections must meet or exceed the connected elements-4.

Connection TypeRequirement
Beam-to-columnProtection thickness ≥ max(beam protection, column protection)
Column splicesSame rating as column (including splice plates and bolts)
Base platesTypically fire-protected by concrete floor slab
Bolted connectionsBolt heads/nuts must be covered if exposed-9

For intumescent coatings: Ensure bolts and connection plates receive same dry film thickness (DFT) as adjacent structural members.

For board encasement: Details at connection nodes require custom cutting and fitting.

10. Quality Control & Inspection

Pre-Application Requirements:

CheckRequirement
Surface preparationSa2.5 blast cleaning (ISO 8501-1) for coatings
Primer compatibilityCheck with coating manufacturer (not all primers accept intumescent)
Environmental conditionsTemperature >5°C, humidity <85% for most coatings
Material certificationManufacturer technical data sheet, fire test report (e.g., GB 14907-2, UL 263, BS 476)

During Application (Coatings):

CheckRequirement
Ambient conditionsWithin manufacturer limits
Wet film thickness (WFT)Per specification (typically multiple passes)
Dry film thickness (DFT)Measured per m² (minimum, average, maximum)
Visual defectsNo runs, sags, bubbles, cracks

Post-Application (Boards):

CheckRequirement
Board thicknessPer specification
Joint treatmentOverlapped or sealed per manufacturer
Mechanical fastenersCorrect type and spacing
PenetrationsSealed with fire-rated mastic

Third-Party Testing Standards:

StandardRegionScope
GB 14907-2018ChinaFire protection coatings classification & testing-2
UL 263 / ASTM E119USAFire tests of building construction
BS 476UKFire tests on building materials
EN 13381EuropeFire resistance of structural steel

11. Cost Comparison (Approximate, per m² of steel surface)

SystemMaterialInstallationTotalLifespanBest Value For
Intumescent (1.5h, interior)$15-25$10-15$25-4015-20 yearsVisible steel, architecture
Intumescent (2.0h, interior)$25-40$15-20$40-6015-20 yearsHigher rating, visible
Cementitious (1.5h)$5-10$10-15$15-2520-30 yearsConcealed steel, industrial
Cementitious (2.0h)$8-15$15-20$23-3520-30 yearsHigher rating, concealed
Board encasement (2.0h)$20-35$25-40$45-7530+ yearsHigh durability, impact areas
Epoxy intumescent (jet fire)$50-100+$20-30$70-130+25+ yearsPetrochemical, offshore

Value takeaway:

  • Concealed steel: Cementitious is most economical.
  • Visible steel: Intumescent pays for itself in aesthetics.
  • High durability: Board systems last longest.

12. Link to Steel Structure Fire Protection Service

We provide complete fire protection solutions—engineered, applied, and certified.

Our services include:

  • Consultation & design: Fire resistance rating determination based on local building codes (IBC, Eurocode, GB 50016).
  • Surface preparation: Sa2.5 blast cleaning, primer application.
  • Intumescent coating: Water-based or solvent-based. DFT up to 3.0mm. Ratings 0.5-2.0h.
  • Cementitious coating: Vermiculite/perlite-based. Thickness 10-50mm. Ratings 1.0-3.0h.
  • Board encasement: Calcium silicate or gypsum boards. Ratings 1.0-3.0h.
  • Quality documentation: DFT reports, adhesion tests, photographic records, material certificates.

For overseas clients:
We work with internationally certified fire protection materials (UL, BS, EN, GB compliant). We provide full test reports and can arrange third-party witness testing if required.

👉 [Request a fire protection quote]
Send us your building type, local fire code requirements, steel sections, and whether steel is visible or concealed. We will return a protection recommendation, thickness calculation, and budget price within 48 hours.

Summary Table: Quick Fire Protection Selection

Your ProjectProtection TypeTypical RatingWhy
Warehouse (concealed steel)Cementitious1.0-1.5hLowest cost
Office building (exposed columns)Intumescent (water-based)1.0-2.0hArchitectural finish
Industrial plant (high durability)Board encasement2.0-3.0hImpact resistant
Parking garage (exposed, humid)Cementitious (sealed)1.5-2.0hCost + moisture resistance
Airport / Stadium (visible, high traffic)Intumescent + topcoat1.5-2.0hAesthetics + durability
Petrochemical (jet fire risk)Epoxy intumescent or board2.0-3.0hJet fire resistance
Retrofit (access difficult)Intumescent (spray)1.0-1.5hFast application, low weight

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