Ultimate behaviour of bolted beam-to-column connections in large rotations

被引:2
|
作者
Francavilla, Antonella B. [1 ]
Latour, Massimo [1 ]
Tan, P. J. [2 ]
Rizzano, Gianvittorio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Salerno, Dept Civil Engn, Fisciano, SA, Italy
[2] UCL, Dept Mech Engn, London, England
关键词
T-stubs; Robustness; Geometric non-linear model; Mechanical model; Component method; STUBS; MODEL; CAPACITY; DESIGN; JOINTS; LOAD;
D O I
10.1016/j.jcsr.2023.108006
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
The moment-rotation capacity of a beam-to-column joint is critical to the ability of steel-framed structures to survive extreme loading, where catenary actions develop in their connecting beams leading to large joint ro-tations. Recent works have shown that EC3 Part 1-8 breaks down in the regime of large joint rotations since geometric nonlinearity - this is not considered in EC3 -may influence its behaviour leading to gross under-(or over-) prediction of its response. To fill this knowledge gap, a mechanical model of a double-split tee joint (Francavilla et al., 2016), that only considers material non-linearity, is extended here to include geometric non -linearity. The results of six full-scale joint tests, that developed significant catenary actions in the joint com-ponents are presented. The updated mechanical model will be shown to be highly accurate in predicting the ultimate joint rotation (phi) and the maximum bending moment capacity (M) of the joint. Comparison between the predicted parameters and experimental data gives a mean value of 1.04 (and a CoV equal to 0.07) for the ratio phi th/phi exp and a mean and CoV of 1.03 and 0.12, respectively, for the ratio Mth/Mexp. To demonstrate the fidelity of the model, predictions from a previous non-linear material model (MNM), disregarding geometric nonlinearity, will be compared to the current one (GMNM).
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Modelling of the behaviour of beam-to-column connections at elevated temperature
    Al Jabri, KS
    HIGH PERFORMANCE STRUCTURES AND MATERIALS II, 2004, : 319 - 328
  • [22] Behaviour of stainless steel beam-to-column bolted connections-Part 1: Simplified FE model
    Eladly, Mohammed M.
    JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTIONAL STEEL RESEARCH, 2020, 164
  • [23] Study on the progressive collapse behavior of fully bolted RCS beam-to-column connections
    Tang, Hongyuan
    Deng, Xuezhi
    Jia, Yigang
    Xiong, Jingang
    Peng, Chunmei
    ENGINEERING STRUCTURES, 2019, 199
  • [24] Flexural behavior of clad rack beam-to-column bolted connections at high temperatures
    Liao, Hui
    Jiang, Shou-Chao
    Wang, Yuan-Zuo
    Zhu, Shaojun
    Zhao, Xianzhong
    JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTIONAL STEEL RESEARCH, 2022, 197
  • [25] Seismic behavior of bolted beam-to-column connections for concrete filled steel tube
    Wu, LY
    Chung, LL
    Tsai, SF
    Shen, TJ
    Huang, GL
    JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTIONAL STEEL RESEARCH, 2005, 61 (10) : 1387 - 1410
  • [26] Experimental study of fire resistance of bolted laminated bamboo beam-to-column connections
    Xu, Qingfeng
    Han, Chongqing
    Wang, Mingqian
    Harries, Kent A.
    Dai, Lu
    Leng, Yubing
    JOURNAL OF BUILDING ENGINEERING, 2025, 99
  • [27] A FE parametric study of RWS beam-to-column bolted connections with cellular beams
    Tsavdaridis, Konstantinos Daniel
    Papadopoulos, Theodore
    JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTIONAL STEEL RESEARCH, 2016, 116 : 92 - 113
  • [28] Cold-formed steel beam-to-column bolted connections for seismic applications
    Papargyriou, Ioannis
    Mojtabaei, Seyed Mohammad
    Hajirasouliha, Iman
    Becque, Jurgen
    Pilakoutas, Kypros
    THIN-WALLED STRUCTURES, 2022, 172
  • [29] BEAM-TO-COLUMN MOMENT CONNECTIONS
    GRUNDY, P
    THOMAS, IR
    BENNETTS, ID
    JOURNAL OF THE STRUCTURAL DIVISION-ASCE, 1980, 106 (01): : 313 - 330
  • [30] BEAM-TO-COLUMN MOMENT CONNECTIONS
    KRISHNAMURTHY, N
    JOURNAL OF THE STRUCTURAL DIVISION-ASCE, 1980, 106 (12): : 2573 - 2574