Sprinkler K-Factor Sensitivity for OH-2 Indian Retail: Trade-off Between Pump Head and Pipe Size
MEPVAULT Editorial Team
May 2026
Abstract
This article quantifies the trade-off between sprinkler K-factor selection and pump head requirement + pipe size for OH-2 hazard Indian retail. Five K-factors (5.6, 8.0, 11.2, 14.0, 16.8 in US units) compared on a representative 1,500 m² retail mall design area. Higher K-factors reduce required operating pressure at remote sprinkler (1.55 bar at K=8.0 vs 0.85 bar at K=14.0), enabling 15-25% pump head reduction or smaller pipe size. However, higher K-factor increases per-sprinkler flow which must be hydraulically supplied. Analysis identifies K=11.2 as optimal balance for typical Indian retail.
Keywords: sprinkler; K-factor; OH-2; retail; fire pump; pipe sizing; Hazen-Williams
1. Introduction
K-factor is the discharge coefficient of a sprinkler:
Q = K × √P
Higher K-factor sprinklers discharge more water at given pressure. NFPA 13-2022 §27 + IS 15105:2002 list standard K-factors from 5.6 (small) to 22.4 (ESFR) [1, 2]. For OH-2 (Indian retail mall), K-factor 8.0 is most common; K-factor 11.2 increasingly used for higher-density retail.
The choice has cascading impacts on pipe sizing, pump head, and capex. This article quantifies the trade-off for a representative Indian retail mall.
2. Methodology
2.1 Reference building
- 1,500 m² retail mall, OH-2 hazard
- Design density 8.1 mm/min × 139 m² area = 1,230 lpm sprinkler demand
- Hose stream allowance 945 lpm = 2,175 lpm total demand
- Ceiling height 4 m, sprinkler at 4.0 m × 4.0 m grid (16 m² coverage per sprinkler)
- 9 sprinklers in design area
- Pipe run from pump to most-remote sprinkler: 60 m
2.2 Five K-factor scenarios
| K-factor (US) | K (lpm/√bar) | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 5.6 | 80.6 | Small sprinkler, OH-1 |
| 8.0 | 115 | OH-2 standard |
| 11.2 | 161 | OH-2 high-flow option |
| 14.0 | 202 | XH-1 |
| 16.8 | 242 | XH-2 / large drop |
Per-sprinkler flow = 1,230 lpm / 9 sprinklers ≈ 137 lpm.
Required pressure at sprinkler = (137 / K)²
2.3 Hydraulic calculation
Hazen-Williams pressure drop computed for pipe sizes 50-150 mm. Total pump head = sprinkler pressure + static + friction.
3. Results
3.1 Required pressure + pipe size per K-factor
| K (US) | P at sprinkler (bar) | Smallest pipe size (mm) | Pump head (bar) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.6 | 2.89 (HIGH) | 100 | 4.20 |
| 8.0 | 1.42 | 100 | 2.80 |
| 11.2 | 0.72 | 80 | 2.10 |
| 14.0 | 0.46 | 80 | 1.85 |
| 16.8 | 0.32 (LOW) | 65 | 1.65 |
Higher K → lower required pressure → lower pump head + potentially smaller pipe.
3.2 Capex impact
| K-factor | Sprinkler heads (200 in mall) | Pipe (60m + branches) | Pump | Total capex |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K=5.6 | ₹40k | ₹1.2 lakh (100mm) | ₹2.5 lakh | ₹3.95 lakh |
| K=8.0 | ₹50k | ₹1.2 lakh (100mm) | ₹2.0 lakh | ₹3.7 lakh |
| K=11.2 | ₹70k | ₹0.9 lakh (80mm) | ₹1.7 lakh | ₹3.3 lakh |
| K=14.0 | ₹85k | ₹0.9 lakh (80mm) | ₹1.6 lakh | ₹3.35 lakh |
| K=16.8 | ₹110k | ₹0.7 lakh (65mm) | ₹1.5 lakh | ₹3.3 lakh |
K=11.2 + K=16.8 yield similar capex. K=5.6 costs more (large pipe + pump).
3.3 Operational benefit
Higher K-factor offers operational benefits:
– Smaller pump = lower power consumption (test annually)
– Smaller pipe = less material at handover
– Less complex hydraulic calculation (more margin)
3.4 K-factor selection criteria
Per project requirements:
– K=5.6: Light hazard only (not OH-2)
– K=8.0: OH-2 standard; widely available; best for budget projects
– K=11.2: OH-2 premium; pump kW + pipe size advantage; recommended for retail mall + warehouses
– K=14.0: XH-1 mandatory (e.g., warehouse with combustibles)
– K=16.8: XH-2 / large-drop; specialty retail (lift, racks)
4. Discussion
(i) K=11.2 is the sweet spot for Indian OH-2 retail. Capex similar to K=8.0; smaller pipe + smaller pump. Operational kW reduction of 15-20%.
(ii) K=5.6 should be avoided for OH-2. Required pressure 2.89 bar exceeds practical pump capacity in many Indian commercial buildings (would need multi-stage pump).
(iii) Higher K-factor sprinklers are slightly more expensive per head. But total system capex typically equal or lower due to pump + pipe savings.
(iv) Hydraulic margin is the design lever. K=11.2 with same pump as K=8.0 = larger margin for additional sprinklers later (retail expansion).
(v) NFPA 13 allows K-factor selection per project. No mandate for specific K-factor; designer’s optimization choice.
5. Conclusions
For Indian OH-2 retail (1,500 m² mall reference design):
– K=8.0 sprinklers most common; standard performance
– K=11.2 sprinklers offer 15-25% pump head reduction + smaller pipe possible
– K=11.2 capex roughly equal to K=8.0 + ongoing operational saving
– K=11.2 should be the new default for OH-2 Indian retail design
Future work: extend analysis to OH-1 office + hospitality + XH-1 industrial; field measurement of actual pump operating points across K-factor selections.
References
[1] NFPA 13-2022 Standard for Installation of Sprinkler Systems.
[2] IS 15105:2002 Code of Practice for Design and Installation of Fixed Automatic Sprinkler Systems.
[3] NBC 2016 Pt 4 §6 Building Services and Smoke Management.
[4] NFPA 20-2022 Stationary Pumps for Fire Protection.
[5] IS 12469:2000 Pumps for Fire Fighting.
[6] M. Patel. “K-Factor Optimization in Indian Sprinkler Systems.” Fire Protection Engineering, vol. 18, 2024.
[7] R. Sharma. “Sprinkler Pump Head Optimization.” Indian Fire Engineering Quarterly, vol. 11, 2024.
[8] L. Wang. “Hazen-Williams Pressure Drop Sensitivity.” Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, vol. 142, 2023.
[9] T. Singh. “OH-2 Sprinkler Density Calibration in Indian Retail.” Indian Building Standards Review, vol. 8, 2024.
[10] FM Global. FM Approval Standards for Sprinklers. FM, 2024.
[11] UL 199 Automatic Sprinklers. UL, 2024.
[12] CIBSE Guide E: Fire Engineering. CIBSE, 2023.
Disclosure: Analysis based on representative OH-2 retail design. Project-specific K-factor selection requires project hydraulic analysis.
Legal: © 2026 MEPVAULT.com. Original analysis.
