26 research outputs found

    Experimental axial-compressive behaviour of bare cold-formed-steel studs with semirigid-track and ideal-hinged boundary-conditions

    Get PDF
    Studs are the primary load-bearing components in cold-formed steel (CFS) wall panels, connected to tracks at both ends with self-tapping screws, forming a semirigid boundary condition (BCT). Most existing tests on the axial compressive behaviour of bare CFS studs are based on either theoretically-hinged (BCH) or fully-fixed boundary conditions. Previous researchers have employed BCT only on sheathed stud-wall panels. However, practicing engineers and current design codes, e.g., Eurocode 3, follow an all-steel design. Therefore, this research experimentally investigated bare-CFS-studs' axial compressive behaviour with BCT, considering, for the first time, the combined effect of the tracks' warping rigidity, stud-to-track gap, non-linear connection stiffness, and bare studs' various cross-sectional slenderness. Forty-two industry-standard lipped channel sections (studs) of five thicknesses (1.2-3 mm), three depths (75–125 mm), and two heights (1.2 & 1.5 m) were tested under static-concentric axial compressive loading with BCT. Another fourteen studs were tested with BCH, a comparator to BCT. Results demonstrated that the studs' global failure mechanisms were flexural-torsional in BCT instead of flexural in BCH. Studs' axial stiffness was two-phased in BCT due to the stud-to-track gap, compared to single-phased stiffness in BCH. >1.8 mm stud-to-track gap caused stud-to-track connections' failure and studs' sudden capacity reduction during gap closure. Studs achieved 1.22 times higher axial-compressive strength, 2.3 times more axial-shortening, 0.7 times lower axial stiffness, and 58% lower axial-compressive strain at the web-midheight under BCT-PhaseII than BCH. Tested strengths were compared with EC3 design strength, and an effective-length-factor of 0.65 was suggested for efficient design of studs with BCT

    Wavelet-based operating deflection shapes for locating scour-related stiffness losses in multi-span bridges

    Get PDF
    Scour erosion poses a significant risk to bridge safety worldwide and remains among the top causes of failure. Scour at bridge foundations changes the stiffness of the soil-foundation system, resulting in global changes in the dynamic behavior of the bridge. In this paper, a new approach to detect the loss in foundation stiffness resulting from scour at multiple foundation locations is proposed, using wavelet-based Operating Deflection Shape (ODS) amplitudes. A numerical model of a bridge with four simply supported spans resting on piers is used to introduce and test the approach. Scour erosion is modelled as a reduction in vertical foundation stiffness under one or multiple bridge piers. A fleet of passing trucks, modelled as half-car vehicles, are used to excite the bridge to enable structural accelerations be calculated at an ‘accelerometer’ (sensor node) located at each support. The proposed method is shown to be effective with only one accelerometer at each support location in a multi-span bridge. Using a statistical population of passing vehicles, the temporal accelerations measured at each support are averaged and transformed into the frequency–spatial domain, in order to estimate the wavelet-based ODS for a given scour case. A damage indicator is postulated based on differences between the ODS of healthy and scoured bridge cases. The damage indicator enables visual identification of the location of scoured piers considering a range of natural frequencies of the system

    Laboratory investigation of a bridge scour monitoring method using decentralized modal analysis

    Get PDF
    Scour is a significant issue for bridges worldwide that influences the global stiffness of bridge structures and hence alters the dynamic behaviour of these systems. For the first time, this article presents a new approach to detect bridge scour at shallow pad foundations, using a decentralized modal analysis approach through re-deployable accelerometers to extract modal information. A numerical model of a bridge with four simply supported spans on piers is created to test the approach. Scour is modelled as a reduction in foundation stiffness under a given pier. A passing half-car vehicle model is simulated to excite the bridge in phases of measurement to obtain segments of the mode shape using output-only modal analysis. Two points of the bridge are used to obtain modal amplitudes in each phase, which are combined to estimate the global mode shape. A damage indicator is postulated based on fitting curves to the mode shapes, using maximum likelihood, which can locate scour damage. The root mean square difference between the healthy and scoured mode shape curves exhibits an almost linear increase with increasing foundation stiffness loss under scour. Experimental tests have been carried out on a scaled model bridge to validate the approach presented in this article

    Large expert-curated database for benchmarking document similarity detection in biomedical literature search

    Get PDF
    Document recommendation systems for locating relevant literature have mostly relied on methods developed a decade ago. This is largely due to the lack of a large offline gold-standard benchmark of relevant documents that cover a variety of research fields such that newly developed literature search techniques can be compared, improved and translated into practice. To overcome this bottleneck, we have established the RElevant LIterature SearcH consortium consisting of more than 1500 scientists from 84 countries, who have collectively annotated the relevance of over 180 000 PubMed-listed articles with regard to their respective seed (input) article/s. The majority of annotations were contributed by highly experienced, original authors of the seed articles. The collected data cover 76% of all unique PubMed Medical Subject Headings descriptors. No systematic biases were observed across different experience levels, research fields or time spent on annotations. More importantly, annotations of the same document pairs contributed by different scientists were highly concordant. We further show that the three representative baseline methods used to generate recommended articles for evaluation (Okapi Best Matching 25, Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency and PubMed Related Articles) had similar overall performances. Additionally, we found that these methods each tend to produce distinct collections of recommended articles, suggesting that a hybrid method may be required to completely capture all relevant articles. The established database server located at https://relishdb.ict.griffith.edu.au is freely available for the downloading of annotation data and the blind testing of new methods. We expect that this benchmark will be useful for stimulating the development of new powerful techniques for title and title/abstract-based search engines for relevant articles in biomedical research.Peer reviewe

    Seismic analysis of braced plan irregular structures using hybrid testing and numerical modelling

    No full text
    THESIS 9719The seismic behaviour of concentrically braced plan irregular structures has been investigated experimentally and numerically. An experimental programme consisting of twenty-four substructured soft-RT hybrid tests of a single-storey concentrically braced frame were undertaken. The hybrid test method combines physical dynamic testing of part of the structure with simultaneous numerical modelling of the rest of the structure. This concept is known as substructuring and allows full-scale cost effective dynamic testing. A structure can be divided into a physical and numerical substructure. The braced plan irregular structures investigated in this thesis have varying levels of torsional stiffness (lateral torsional frequency ratio) and uneven distribution of mass (static eccentricity) in plan resulting in a distribution of the centre of mass away from the centre of resistance of the structure. The consequence of this is a torsional rather than translational seismic response of the structure due to the plan irregularity

    Seismic damage detection for a steel braced frame structure

    No full text

    Finite element modelling of cyclic behaviour of cold-formed steel bolted moment-resisting connections

    Get PDF
    This paper investigates the accuracy of new finite element modelling approaches to predict the behaviour of bolted moment-connections between cold-formed steel members, formed by using brackets bolted to the webs of the section, under low cycle fatigue. ABAQUS software is used as a modelling platform. Such joints are used for portal frames and potentially have good seismic resisting capabilities, which is important for construction in developing countries. The modelling implications of a two-dimensional beam element model, a three-dimensional shell element model and a three-dimensional solid element model are reported. Quantitative and qualitative results indicate that the threedimensional quadratic S8R shell element model most accurately predicts the hysteretic behaviour and energy dissipation capacity of the connection when compared to the test results

    A Cyber-Physical Risk Assessment Approach for Internet of Things Enabled Transportation Infrastructure

    No full text
    A critical transportation infrastructure integrated with the Internet of Things based wireless sensor network, operates as a cyber-physical system. However, the new form of IoT enabled transportation infrastructure is susceptible to cyber-physical attacks in the sensing area, due to inherent cyber vulnerabilities of IoT devices and deficient control barriers that could protect it. Traditional risk assessment processes, consider the physical and cyber space as isolated environments, resulting in IoT enabled transportation infrastructure not being assessed by stakeholders (i.e., operators, civil and security engineers) for cyber-physical attacks. In this paper, a new risk assessment approach for cyber-physical attacks against IoT based wireless sensor network is proposed. The approach relies on the identification and proposal of novel cyber-physical characteristics, in the aspect of threat source (e.g., motives), vulnerability (e.g., lack of authentication mechanisms) and types of physical impacts (e.g., casualties). Cyber-physical risk is computed as a product of the level and importance of these characteristics. Monte Carlo simulations and sensitivity analysis are performed to evaluate the results of an IoT enabled bridge subjected to cyber-physical attack scenarios. The results indicate that 76.6% of simulated cases have high-risk and control barriers operating in physical and cyber space can reduce the cyber-physical risk by 71.8%. Additionally, cyber-physical risk differentiates when the importance of the characteristics that are considered during risk assessment is overlooked. The approach is of interest to stakeholders who attempt to incorporate the cyber domain in risk assessment procedures of their system
    corecore