1,743 research outputs found

    Behaviour of pultruded beam-to-column joints using steel web cleats

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    Response of pultruded Fibre Reinforced Polymer (FRP) beam-to-column joints with steel bolted web cleats is studied through physical testing. Two joint configurations are considered with either three or two bolts per cleat leg, as per drawings in a pultruder’s Design Manual. Moment-rotation curves, failure modes and potential performance gains from semi-rigid action are determined from two batches, each having six nominally identical joints. Results show that initial joint properties for stiffness and moment can possess, at 19 to 62%, an extremely high coefficient of variation. All joints failed by fracturing within the FRP column’s flange outstands. Because this failure mode has not been reported previously there is a need to establish how its existence influences joint design. As joint properties for the three- and two-bolted configurations are not significantly different, the middle (third) bolt is found to be redundant. Damage is shown to initiate within the column flange outstands when the mid-span deflection of a 5.08 m span beam, subjected to a uniformly distributed load, is span/500. This is half the serviceability vertical deflection limit recommended in the EUROCOMP Design Code and Handbook. The mean joint moment resistance for design is established to be 2.9 kNm and this is 1.5 times the moment for damage onset

    Rationale for simplifying the strength formulae for the design of multi-row bolted connections failing in net tension

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    Hart-Smith [1] developed a set of closed form strength formulae for a semi-empirical approach to determine the net tension strength of multi-row bolted connections with composite materials. Mottram [2] showed that, for a pultruded fibre reinforced polymer material, the approach to be reliable (and conservative) for the configuration comprising two rows with a single bolt per row. This led to the formulae being developed into clauses in an American pre-standard for Load and Resistance Factor Design (LRFD) of Pultruded Fiber-Reinforced Polymer (FRP) Structures [3]. Because the expressions in the Hart-Smith formulae are not simple, the message coming from the practitioners, on the ASCE/SEI Fiber Composites And Polymers Standards committee (FCAPS) tasked with developing the pre-standard [3] into a standard, is that they would not use them when designing bolted connections. Taking stock of the specified geometries, bolt details and design parameters permitted by the pre-standard [3] the author conducted an analytical parametric study using the Hart-Smith formulae with the aim of establishing simplified forms that could be routinely used in the design office. Presented in this paper is the provenance to this code-specific work when the connection has more than a single row of bolts. A presentation is given to what has been lost, in terms of calculated net tension strength, by providing the simplified strength formula in the mandatory part to the standard. To enable the designer to be able to take full advantage of the Hart-Smith design approach [1, 2], the ‘complicated’ formulae and their accompanying mandatory-style text are to be found in an appendix with the standard’s commentary [3]

    Characterization by full-size testing of pultruded frame joints for the Startlink house

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    Presented in this paper are test results to determine the moment-rotation characteristics of joint details for a portal frame specific to a pultruded fiber reinforced polymer assembly for the Startlink house. Two joints having beam-to-column dowel connections, with and without extra adhesively bonding, were statically loaded in increments of moment or rotation to ultimate failure. The floor beam and stud column members are bespoke closed-sections developed for the Startlink lightweight building system. The serviceability design calculations for the demonstrator house to be constructed in Bourne, England, assumed the frame’s joints to be rigid. Clauses in EN 1993-1-8:2005 have been applied to classify the measured rotational stiffnesses against the rigid requirement, and an evaluation is made of the modes of failure with respect to the joint’s design moments. Only the joint with extra bonding between the mating surfaces of members is found to be classified as rigid. Both joints are shown to have an acceptable joint strength

    Introduction to Q-tensor theory

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    This paper aims to provide an introduction to a basic form of the Q{\bf Q}-tensor approach to modelling liquid crystals, which has seen increased interest in recent years. The increase in interest in this type of modelling approach has been driven by investigations into the fundamental nature of defects and new applications of liquid crystals such as bistable displays and colloidal systems for which a description of defects and disorder is essential. The work in this paper is not new research, rather it is an introductory guide for anyone wishing to model a system using such a theory. A more complete mathematical description of this theory, including a description of flow effects, can be found in numerous sources but the books by Virga and Sonnet and Virga are recommended. More information can be obtained from the plethora of papers using such approaches, although a general introduction for the novice is lacking. The first few sections of this paper will detail the development of the Q{\bf Q}-tensor approach for nematic liquid crystalline systems and construct the free energy and governing equations for the mesoscopic dependent variables. A number of device surface treatments are considered and theoretical boundary conditions are specified for each instance. Finally, an example of a real device is demonstrated

    A finite element modelling methodology for the non-linear stiffness evaluation of adhesively bonded single lap-joints. Part 2, Novel shell mesh to minimise analysis time

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    A new modelling methodology is presented that enables the stiffness of adhesively bonded single lap-joints to be included in the finite element analysis of whole vehicle bodies. This work was driven by the need to significantly reduce computing resources for vehicle analysis. To achieve this goal the adhesive bond line and adherends are modelled by a relatively ‘small’ number of shell elements to replace the usual solid element mesh for a reliable analysis. Previous work in Part 1 has provided the necessary background information to develop and verify the new finite element analysis that reduces the solution runtime by a factor of 1000. Although a joint’s non-linear stiffness is reliably simulated to failure load, it is recognised by the authors that the coarse shell mesh cannot provide accurate peak stresses or peak strains for the successful application of a numerical failure criterion. Given that the new modelling methodology is very quick to apply to existing shell models of vehicle bodies, it is recommended for use by the stress analyst who requires, say at the preliminary design stage, whole vehicle stiffness performance in a significantly reduced timeframe

    Buckling of built-up columns of pultruded fiber-reinforced polymer C-sections

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    This paper presents the test results of an experimental investigation to evaluate the buckling behavior of built-up columns of pultruded profiles, subjected to axial compression. Specimens are assembled by using four (off the shelf) channel shaped profiles of E-glass fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP), having similar detailing to strut members in a large FRP structure that was executed in 2009 to start the restoration of the Santa Maria Paganica church in L’Aquila, Italy. This church had partially collapsed walls and no roof after the April 6, 2009, earthquake of 6.3 magnitude. A total of six columns are characterized with two different configurations for the bolted connections joining the channel sections into a built-up strut. Test results are discussed and a comparison is made with closed-form equation predictions for flexural buckling resistance, with buckling resistance values established from both eigenvalue and geometric nonlinear finite element analyses. Results show that there is a significant role played by the end loading condition, the composite action, and imperfections. Simple closed-form equations overestimate the flexural buckling strength, whereas the resistance provided by the nonlinear analysis provides a reasonably reliable numerical approach to establishing the actual buckling behavior

    Seeding of the nematic-isotropic phase transition by an electric field

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    In this paper, we use a relatively simple continuum model to investigate the effects of dielectric inhomogeneity within confined liquid crystal cells. Specifically, we consider, in planar, cylindrical and spherical geometries, the stability of a nematic-isotropic interface subject to an applied voltage. Depending on the magnitude of this voltage, the temperature and the geometry of the cell, the nematic region may shrink until the material is completely isotropic within the cell, grow until the nematic phase cells the cell or, in certain geometries, coexist with the isotropic phase. For planar geometry, no coexistence is found, but we are able to give analytical expressions for the critical voltage for an electric-field-induced phase transition as well as the critical wetting layer thickness for arbitrary applied voltage. In cells with cylindrical and spherical geometries, however, stable nematic-isotropic coexistence is predicted, the thickness of the nematic region being controllable by alteration of the applied voltage.</p

    Laterally unrestrained bearing strength of hot-wet conditioned pultruded FRP material

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    Presented in this paper are test results of a study pertaining to the reduction in bearing strength due to the effect of hot-wet conditioning on specimens cut from a polyester matrix based pultruded FRP structural shape. A total of 100 coupons (for 20 batches of five) were immersed in distilled water for three and six months at a constant temperature of 40°C. Subsequently, they were load tested using stainless steel ‘pins’ of M10 and M20 sizes with material orientations of 0o, 45o and 90o to the direction of pultrusion. Furthermore, this test series considered the effect of loading with and without bolt thread in the bearing zone. Testing employed a non-standard set-up that accommodates smaller test coupons, allowing material to be sourced from the web and flange of a 254×254×9.53 mm wide flange shape. An evaluation of the salient results provides characteristic bearing strength values (in accordance with Annex D of EN1990) and comparisons are drawn between equivalent strengths for non-aged (zero months) material from a previous test series. The degree of strength reduction is found to be influenced by both the ‘pin’ size and type, and observations are drawn towards the safe and reliable design of bolted connections
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