Babrauskas, V; Lucas, D; Eisenberg, D; Singla, V; Dedeo, M and Blum, A (2012) Flame retardants in building insulation: A case for re-evaluating building codes. Building Research & Information, 40(6), pp. 738-755. ISSN 0961-3218
Abstract
US building codes balance the consideration of hazards to public safety, health and general welfare. Current codes require foam plastic insulation materials to have both protection by a thermal barrier and compliance with Steiner Tunnel test requirements. The Steiner Tunnel test is met by adding flame-retardant chemicals to the foam. Studies demonstrate that the Steiner Tunnel test does not give reliable fire safety results for foam plastic insulations. Foams that meet the Steiner Tunnel test still pose a fire hazard if used without a code-mandated thermal barrier. Insulations protected by a thermal barrier are fire safe and the use of flame retardants does not provide any additional benefit. Evidence is examined of the health and ecological impacts from the added flame-retardant chemicals. Changing the building codes could prevent health and environmental harm from the toxicity of these substances without a reduction in fire safety. Plastic foam insulations that are protected by a thermal barrier should be exempted from the Steiner Tunnel test and the need to use flame retardants. This change would align US codes with code regulations in Sweden and Norway and ensure the fire safety as well as improve health and environmental impacts.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | building codes; fire safety; flame retardants; flammability; insulation; public health; steiner tunnel; thermal barrier; toxicity |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 14:08 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 14:08 |