Difference between revisions of "9-11/evidence/temperatures"

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(Created page with "==About== For now, this is a collection of notes about temperatures believed to have been achieved within the WTC fires, and temperatures at which various things happen to materi...")
 
m (moved 9-11/anomalies/collapse/temperatures to 9-11/evidence/temperatures: there may not be an "evidence" folder yet, but there should be)
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Revision as of 19:26, 22 July 2011

About

For now, this is a collection of notes about temperatures believed to have been achieved within the WTC fires, and temperatures at which various things happen to materials (especially structural steel) known to have been used in the WTC construction, for comparison purposes.

Definitions

Critical temperature is the temperature at which a structural element cannot safely support its load. (Presumably the size of "load" is based on a rating for that particular material.) This temperature is often defined as the temperature at which the element's yield stress has been reduced to 60% of the room temperature yield stress.

Comparison Table

Numbers in italics have been converted from figures given in the other measure of temperature.

°C °F description
452 hottest temperature achieved in samples metallurgically analyzed by NIST (the samples analyzed were those believed to have been closest to the hottest parts of the fire)
400 752 in Japan, the critical temperature is apparently considered to be below this (Wikipedia, no source)
538 1000 lower end of critical temperature in China, Europe and North America (e.g., ASTM E-119) (Wikipedia citing offline source)
1200 structural steel reportedly loses half its strength (source?)
1300 upper end of critical temperature in China, Europe and North America (e.g., ASTM E-119) (Wikipedia citing offline source)
1700 maximum temperature of open flame
1800 hottest temperature claimed in NIST report (not supported by their own metallurgic analysis of actual samples)
2000 fire-rating of steel used in WTC construction, good for 6 hours