Experimental study on orthogonal joints in cross-laminated timber with self-tapping screws installed with mixed angles

被引:48
作者
Brown, Justin R. [1 ]
Li, Minghao [1 ]
Tannert, Thomas [2 ]
Moroder, Daniel [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Canterbury, Dept Civil & Nat Resources Engn, Canterbury, New Zealand
[2] Univ Northern British Columbia Prince George, Sch Engn, Prince George, BC, Canada
[3] PTL Struct Consultants, Christchurch, New Zealand
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
Cross-laminated timber; Orthogonal joints; Self-tapping screws; Mixed angle installations; Ductility; Overstrength; SEISMIC PERFORMANCE; CONNECTIONS; DESIGN; BEHAVIOR; DUCTILITY; WALL;
D O I
10.1016/j.engstruct.2020.111560
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Cross-laminated timber (CLT) is increasingly being used in lateral load resisting systems of multi-storey buildings. Conventional in-plane CLT shear walls can be transformed into CLT core-wall structures with enhanced lateral strength and stiffness when the individual walls are connected orthogonally. In this paper, experimental studies are presented on orthogonal CLT joints with self-tapping screws (STS) installed with mixed angles, i.e. different installation angles between the STS axis and the plane of the CLT surface. A total of 59 orthogonal joint specimens were tested in 9 different configurations to derive the relevant joint performance parameters from monotonic and cyclic tests. The joint specimens used five-layer and seven-layer CLT panels connected by empty set8 mm or by empty set12 mm STS. Different ratios of STS installed inclined and STS installed at 90 degrees to the CLT surface were investigated to determine an optimum ratio of STS for enhanced joint performance. It was found that a ratio of one 90 STS for every two inclined STS ensured significant increase in ductility and displacement capacity of approximately three times when compared to specimens with only inclined STS. A minimum moderate ductility was achieved in all test series where the primary failure mode was STS withdrawal. It was found that 90 degrees STS contributed to both strength and stiffness in joints that also contained inclined STS. The average experimental overstrength was 1.7 for most joint configurations. Existing analytical models were adequate in estimating strength but inadequate to estimate stiffness.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 68 条
[11]   Ductility in Timber Structures: Investigations on Over-Strength Factors [J].
Bruehl, Frank ;
Schaenzlin, Jorg ;
Kuhlmann, Ulrike .
MATERIALS AND JOINTS IN TIMBER STRUCTURES: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS OF TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 9 :181-190
[12]  
Buchanan AH, 2016, WCTE 2016 WORLD C TI
[13]   A proposal for the capacity-design at wall- and building-level in light-frame and cross-laminated timber buildings [J].
Casagrande, Daniele ;
Doudak, Ghasan ;
Polastri, Andrea .
BULLETIN OF EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING, 2019, 17 (06) :3139-3167
[14]  
CEN, 2005, EN12512
[15]  
CEN, 2016, EN 14358:2016: Timber Structures: Calculation and verification of characteristic values
[16]  
CEN, 2005, Eurocode 8: Design of Structures for Earthquake Resistance
[17]  
CEN (European Committee for Standardization), 1991, 26891 CEN
[18]   Feasibility Study of Mass-Timber Cores for the UBC Tall Wood Building [J].
Connolly, Thomas ;
Loss, Cristiano ;
Iqbal, Asif ;
Tannert, Thomas .
BUILDINGS, 2018, 8 (08)
[19]   Self-tapping screws and threaded rods as reinforcement for structural timber elements - A state-of-the-art report [J].
Dietsch, Philipp ;
Brandner, Reinhard .
CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS, 2015, 97 :78-89
[20]   Ductility and overstrength of nailed CLT hold-down connections [J].
Dong, Wenchen ;
Li, Minghao ;
Ottenhaus, Lisa-Mareike ;
Lim, Hyungsuk .
ENGINEERING STRUCTURES, 2020, 215 (215)