Intumescent fire and smoke seal
The word ‘intumescent’ refers to substances that expand and decrease in density on exposure to heat. This behaviour can be used as a coating to protect materials from damage or failure during a fire, or can be used to seal gaps to prevent the spread of fire and smoke.
An Intumescent fire and smoke seal is defined in The code of practice: Hardware for fire and escape doors, Issue 5, (published by DHF and GAI in November 2024) as 'A combined seal designed to enhance the performance of a fire & smoke door assembly, generally by virtue of an intumescent core in the seal profile along with a flexible smoke sealing element (fin or brush).
For more information see also:
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Cavity barrier.
- Cementitious fire protection.
- Concrete vs. steel.
- Finishes.
- Fire protection engineering.
- Fire resistance.
- Fire retardant.
- Fire safety design.
- Installing fire protection to structural steelwork (GG 85).
- Intumescent coatings in buildings
- Intumescent strip.
- Metal fabrication.
- Paints and coatings.
- Passive and reactive fire protection to structural steel (IP 6 12).
- Passive fire protection is a vital tool in any fire strategy.
- Substrate.
Quick links
[edit] Legislation and standards
Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022
Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Secondary legislation linked to the Building Safety Act
Building safety in Northern Ireland
[edit] Dutyholders and competencies
BSI Built Environment Competence Standards
Competence standards (PAS 8671, 8672, 8673)
Industry Competence Steering Group
[edit] Regulators
National Regulator of Construction Products
[edit] Fire safety
Independent Grenfell Tower Inquiry
[edit] Other pages
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