Thanks Fishy, the BSI still have the standard but at ?186 for a withdrawn standard is more than this poor Scotsman can bare!
In terms of why the FR ceiling - the compartment walls between the apartments do not extend to the roof space - instead we have 30 minute barriers every 20m in the roof space which covers approx. 2 apartments.
I have tried British Gypsum and Knauf technical departments and whilst they state their opinion that the 4mm plaster skim on 15mm plasterboard nailed directly to the roof timbers with 450mm mineral wool should achieve 30 minutes, they have no test data to back that up and you are correct that with no sales potential - wouldn't conduct a test.
I have blown the dust of my SFPE Handbook and turned the dusty pages and looked at the make up.
Okay my rationale is that plasterboard consists of approximately 21% water by weight which contributes to the plasters effectiveness as a fire barrier.
We know that the water acts as a thermal barrier by turning to steam within the board which is the calcination of the board. This calcination starts at a temperature that is slightly higher than 100 degrees C.
We have sprinklers in the apartments (but not the roof space) therefore would not expect the calcination process to commence within the board at all or if it does, only in very limited places for a very short period of time.
Some simple CFAST Zone modelling conducted for the apartment show the temperature below 100 degrees C which provides some indication that the calcination will not take place within the plasterboard or be very limited.
The SFPE Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering 4th Edition Section 4 Chapter 13 Table 4-13.1 provides times for the fire resistance of Gypsum Boards which is 20 minutes for a 16mm board and 25 minutes for effectively 19mm of gypsum board.
The detail analysed within the apartment is effectively 19mm of plaster made up of a 15mm board and 4mm skim which as Table 4-13.1 would be expected to provide 25 minutes FR.
The Fire Resistance Design Manual, Gypsum Association, Washington DC, 2000 that if we were to use 2 layers of 12.5mm plasterboard nailed to the timbers with 450mm mineral wool, we would achieve 60 minutes FR.
Table 4-13.1 states that two layers of 13mm wall board provides 40 minutes FR without the mineral wool.
Mineral wool has very good fire retardant properties and are generally resistant to temperatures in excess of 500 degrees which again due to the sprinklers is not anticipated within this scenario.
It could be deduced that the presence of the mineral wool would have an anticipated effect of up to 20 minutes which is beyond that which we require.
With the plaster providing 25 minutes of FR, the mineral wool needing only provide 5 minutes FR then I would expect the detail to achieve 30 minutes ignoring the presence of the sprinklers completely.
Thoughts