NFPA 204 12:2012 Edition
$80.71
NFPA 204: Standard for Smoke and Heat Venting
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
NFPA | 2012 | 88 |
Following the updated guidelines in the 2012 NFPA 204 to correctly design and maintain smoke and heat venting systems. The 2012 NFPA 204: Standard for Smoke and Heat Venting applies to the design of venting systems for the emergency venting of products of combustion from fires in buildings. Manual and computer-modeled solution methods aid in design calculations. The equations or models provide the designer with the necessary tools to develop vent designs based on selected performance objectives related to a specific building and a specific set of circumstances. This latest edition introduces new rules for venting systems in sprinklered buildings, including: The venting system design must be based on an engineering analysis Automatic sprinkler systems must comply with NFPA 13: Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems New Annex material Engineers and architects need this critical Standard to improve fire protection and keep jobs up-to-code.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | Important Notices and Disclaimers |
3 | Additional Notices and Disclaimers |
4 | 2.1 General 2.2 NFPA Publications |
8 | Chapter 1 Administration 1.1 Scope 1.2 Purpose. (Reserved) 1.3 Application 1.4 Retroactivity 1.5 Equivalency 1.6 Units and Formulas |
9 | Chapter 2 Referenced Publications 2.3 Other Publications 2.4 References for Extracts in Mandatory Sections |
10 | Chapter 3 Definitions 3.1 General 3.2 NFPA Official Definitions 3.3 General Definitions |
11 | Chapter 4 Fundamentals 4.1 Design Objectives 4.2 Design Basis 4.3 Determination of Contents Hazard 4.4 Venting 4.5 Smoke Production 4.6 Vent Flows Chapter 5 Vents 5.1 Listed Vents 5.2 Vent Design Constraints |
12 | 5.3 Methods of Operation 5.4 Dimensions and Spacing of Vents 5.5 Mechanical Smoke Exhaust Systems |
13 | Chapter 6 Air Inlets 6.1 General 6.2 Construction 6.3 Location 6.4 Installation 6.5 Methods of Operation 6.6 Dimensions and Spacing of Air Inlets 6.7 Air Paths Chapter 7 Draft Curtains 7.1 General 7.2 Construction 7.3 Location and Depth |
14 | 7.4 Spacing Chapter 8 The Design Fire 8.1 General 8.2 Steady (Limited-Growth) Fires 8.3 Growing (Continuous-Growth) Fires |
15 | Chapter 9 Sizing Vents 9.1 General 9.2 Hand Calculations |
17 | 9.3 Models Chapter 10 Mechanical Smoke Exhaust Systems 10.1 General 10.2 Exhaust Rates 10.3 Fire Exposure 10.4 Number of Exhaust Inlets 10.5 Intake Air Chapter 11 Venting in Sprinklered Buildings 11.1 Design 11.2 Automatic Sprinkler Systems |
18 | 11.3 Storage Occupancies Protected by Control Mode Sprinklers Chapter 12 Inspection and Maintenance 12.1 General 12.2 Requirements 12.3 Inspection, Maintenance, and Acceptance Testing 12.4 Conduct and Observation of Operational Tests |
19 | 12.5 Air Inlets 12.6 Ice and Snow Removal Chapter 13 Design Documentation 13.1 Documentation Required |
20 | Annex A Explanatory Material |
29 | Annex B The Theoretical Basis of LAVENT |
39 | Annex C User Guide for the LAVENT Computer Code |
53 | Annex D Sample Problem Using Engineering Equations (Hand Calculations) and LAVENT |
67 | Annex E Predicting the Rate of Heat Release of Fires |
74 | Annex F Design Information |
82 | Annex G Informational References |
84 | Index |