Fire resistance differences are fundamentally determined by chemical composition and thermal decomposition behavior, not by structural design.
Aluminum honeycomb behavior
Aluminum is a metallic material with:
- Melting point around 660°C
- No combustion reaction
- No toxic gas emission during fire exposure
In fire scenarios, aluminum:
- Maintains structural integrity until melting point
- Does not contribute fuel load
- Meets A1 non-combustible classification in building standards
This makes it highly suitable for:
- High-rise buildings
- Public transportation systems
- Emergency evacuation zones
Paper honeycomb behavior
Paper honeycomb is cellulose-based, meaning:
- Ignition temperature: ~230–260°C
- Continuous combustion once ignited
- Smoke generation during burning
Even when treated with flame retardants:
- It can improve to B or B1 classification
- But cannot achieve non-combustible status
Engineering implication
Fire safety in architecture is not only about flame resistance but also:
- Smoke toxicity
- Flame spread rate
- Structural failure time
Aluminum significantly outperforms paper in all three categories.
Conclusion
Aluminum honeycomb is preferred in any project where fire codes are strict, while paper honeycomb is limited to low-risk interior environments.

