Grizzly Bear
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I am not asking what FEMA stated about the temperatures in the debris pile. What temperatures define a high temperature atmosphere? That is all I asked.Originally Posted by Christopher7
1) It was NOT a "high temperature atmosphere"*
Smoldering fires burn at about 500-600°C.
*WTC7 debris pile
FEMA 403 Appendix C C.3 Summary for Sample 1
1.The thinning of the steel occurred by a high-temperature corrosion due to a combination of oxidation and sulfidation.
2.Heating of the steel into a hot corrosive environment approaching 1000°C (1800°F) results in the formation of a eutectic mixture of iron, oxygen and sulfur that liquefied the steel.
Abstract:
Relates to the development of high temperature resistant coating applicable in the temperature range of 500°C to 700°C. A12O3, TiO2 and ZrO2 have been incorporated in aluminium phosphate and ivory-400 used as binders. Aluminium phosphate as a binder has not performed well in comparison to ivory-400. Aims mainly to study and to highlight the behaviour of the corrosion-resistant coating at high temperature.
"The abstract of this article: LINK seems to be concerned with high temperature corrosion resistance applications on steel in a temperature range of 500-700 oC"
I can bold things too Chris... Perhaps I'm never clear enough on context with you. The coatings are intended to be applied to steel to protect the STEEL from corrosion in a high temperature environment. These corrosion resistant coatings are intended to be applicable in the 500-7-00 oC range
Why would they study the performance of corrosion resistant coating for steel in high temperature environments if there were no real possibility of corrosion in such conditions?
These take place in small amounts over a period of time.
The "high-temperature corrosion due to a combination of oxidation and sulfidation" is unique to this beam.
In red: So a few months worth of heating at between 500 and 600 oC, hot enough to create such an environment capable of expediting the process of severe corrosion of metals?
That were of the same construction as any one of the three towers? That were still on fire when they collapsed entirely? Do tell....There have been more intense, longer lasting fires, and there is no other reported case of this happening.
Although I get the impression you're about to slap me with an example like the windsor tower, or another building which did not collapse due to any number of differences in construction, construction methods, or otherwise.
The gypsum [drywall/wallboard] falls apart but the gypsum molecules don't. The chemical bonds are very strong. If gypsum released its sulfur in a fire, it wouldn't be used for fireproofing.
This would be negligible any way since the sulfur wouldn't cause immediate oxidation of the steel if it were immediately released. The heat releases the water composed in the wallboard ensuring that temperature do not rise above 212 oF. Sorry to say, I'm not as familiar with the sulfur properties in gypsum wallboard but there are certainly other sources available in the lack thereof from the drywall