Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960

It is well known that the current design rules adopted by international design codes such as ISO 14346 and design guides, e.g., the CIDECT design guide No. 3, for chord sidewall failure in mild steel rectangular hollow section (RHS) joints under brace axial compression are considerably conservative,...

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Main Authors: Lan, Xiaoyi, Wardenier, Jaap, Packer, Jeffrey A.
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160109
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1601092022-07-13T00:56:38Z Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960 Lan, Xiaoyi Wardenier, Jaap Packer, Jeffrey A. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering X Joints T Joints It is well known that the current design rules adopted by international design codes such as ISO 14346 and design guides, e.g., the CIDECT design guide No. 3, for chord sidewall failure in mild steel rectangular hollow section (RHS) joints under brace axial compression are considerably conservative, if the RHS joints are adequately supported out-of-plane. This paper presents an investigation into chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960. Representative existing design methods for chord sidewall failure in RHS joints are reviewed, and two alternative design methods, i.e., the modified bearing–buckling method and the Lan–Kuhn​ method, are proposed. Up-to-date test and numerical results reported in the literature are compiled. A wide range of geometric parameters, steel grades up to S960 and loading cases of brace axial loading, brace in-plane bending and brace out-of-plane bending are covered. The existing and proposed design methods are assessed against the collated results. The effects of brace-to-chord height ratio, brace angle, steel grade and chord stress ratio are evaluated. It is shown that the proposed design methods can provide more consistent resistance predictions for chord sidewall failure in mild steel and high-strength steel RHS joints under brace axial compression. Corresponding user-friendly design rules are suggested. The design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints under brace axial tension, brace in-plane bending and brace out-of-plane bending is discussed. Further required research on, in particular, high-strength steel RHS joints is highlighted. 2022-07-13T00:56:38Z 2022-07-13T00:56:38Z 2021 Journal Article Lan, X., Wardenier, J. & Packer, J. A. (2021). Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960. Thin-Walled Structures, 163, 107605-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tws.2021.107605 0263-8231 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160109 10.1016/j.tws.2021.107605 2-s2.0-85103990328 163 107605 en Thin-Walled Structures © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
X Joints
T Joints
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
X Joints
T Joints
Lan, Xiaoyi
Wardenier, Jaap
Packer, Jeffrey A.
Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
description It is well known that the current design rules adopted by international design codes such as ISO 14346 and design guides, e.g., the CIDECT design guide No. 3, for chord sidewall failure in mild steel rectangular hollow section (RHS) joints under brace axial compression are considerably conservative, if the RHS joints are adequately supported out-of-plane. This paper presents an investigation into chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960. Representative existing design methods for chord sidewall failure in RHS joints are reviewed, and two alternative design methods, i.e., the modified bearing–buckling method and the Lan–Kuhn​ method, are proposed. Up-to-date test and numerical results reported in the literature are compiled. A wide range of geometric parameters, steel grades up to S960 and loading cases of brace axial loading, brace in-plane bending and brace out-of-plane bending are covered. The existing and proposed design methods are assessed against the collated results. The effects of brace-to-chord height ratio, brace angle, steel grade and chord stress ratio are evaluated. It is shown that the proposed design methods can provide more consistent resistance predictions for chord sidewall failure in mild steel and high-strength steel RHS joints under brace axial compression. Corresponding user-friendly design rules are suggested. The design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints under brace axial tension, brace in-plane bending and brace out-of-plane bending is discussed. Further required research on, in particular, high-strength steel RHS joints is highlighted.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Lan, Xiaoyi
Wardenier, Jaap
Packer, Jeffrey A.
format Article
author Lan, Xiaoyi
Wardenier, Jaap
Packer, Jeffrey A.
author_sort Lan, Xiaoyi
title Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
title_short Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
title_full Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
title_fullStr Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
title_full_unstemmed Design of chord sidewall failure in RHS joints using steel grades up to S960
title_sort design of chord sidewall failure in rhs joints using steel grades up to s960
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160109
_version_ 1738844852909506560