Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections

The use of high strength steel has been increasingly prevalent in construction of large-scale structures, such as long-span bridges and high-rise buildings, mainly due to its high material strength, allowing structural members and connections to be designed with smaller sizes and simpler configurati...

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Main Author: Jiang, Ke
Other Authors: Zhao Ou
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162400
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-162400
record_format dspace
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::Structures and design
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering::Structures and design
Jiang, Ke
Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
description The use of high strength steel has been increasingly prevalent in construction of large-scale structures, such as long-span bridges and high-rise buildings, mainly due to its high material strength, allowing structural members and connections to be designed with smaller sizes and simpler configurations. However, despite of high material strength, high strength steel has low ductility, which is potentially unfavourable to the behaviour of connections. Owing to the limited research into high strength steel connections and the lack of accurate design rules, this PhD thesis aims to systematically investigate the structural behaviour and design of high strength steel bolted connections. A comprehensive experimental study was firstly conducted, including material tests, in order to derive the material stress–strain responses and key material properties of high strength steel, and connection tests, in order to study the structural behaviour and load-carrying capacities of high strength steel plate-to-plate connections and gusset plate connections. For S690 high strength steel plate-to-plate connections, tests were carried out on a total of 69 connection specimens with different bolt configurations and geometric dimensions, where 32 of them failing by net section fracture, 21 of them failing by bearing and 16 of them failing by block tearing. For S690 high strength steel gusset plate connections, a total of 23 angle-to-plate connection tests and 27 channel-to-plate connection tests were carried out and all the gusset plate connection specimens failed by net section fracture. The experimental programme was supplemented by a numerical modelling programme, where finite element models were firstly developed to replicate the experimental responses and then used to conduct parametric studies to generate further data over a wide range of geometric dimensions. On the basis of the experimental and numerical results, the underlying failure mechanisms and the effects of various parameters on structural behaviour and resistances were analysed and discussed. The obtained test and numerical data were used to assess the accuracy of the existing design rules for high strength steel plate-to-plate connections and gusset plate connections. For high strength steel plate-to-plate connections, the assessment results generally indicated that the existing codified design framework cannot capture the complex nature of connection behaviour and thus resulted in a low level of accuracy. Since many influencing geometric parameters cannot be fully separated and considered, it is difficult to develop pure mechanical-based design methods for high strength steel plate-to-plate connection. Therefore, a machine-learning-based design approach has been proposed and shown to yield substantially improved failure load and mode predictions than the codified design rules. For high strength steel gusset plate connections, the assessment results generally revealed that the existing codified design rules led to inaccurate failure load predictions, owing to the lack of consideration of the effects of material grade and influential geometric parameters. Therefore, a set of new mechanical-based design approaches were proposed and shown to offer more accurate and reliable failure load predictions over the design codes for high strength steel gusset plate connections.
author2 Zhao Ou
author_facet Zhao Ou
Jiang, Ke
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Jiang, Ke
author_sort Jiang, Ke
title Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
title_short Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
title_full Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
title_fullStr Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
title_full_unstemmed Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
title_sort structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162400
_version_ 1749179152394616832
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1624002022-11-01T04:54:23Z Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections Jiang, Ke Zhao Ou School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Nanyang Technological University ou.zhao@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Civil engineering::Structures and design The use of high strength steel has been increasingly prevalent in construction of large-scale structures, such as long-span bridges and high-rise buildings, mainly due to its high material strength, allowing structural members and connections to be designed with smaller sizes and simpler configurations. However, despite of high material strength, high strength steel has low ductility, which is potentially unfavourable to the behaviour of connections. Owing to the limited research into high strength steel connections and the lack of accurate design rules, this PhD thesis aims to systematically investigate the structural behaviour and design of high strength steel bolted connections. A comprehensive experimental study was firstly conducted, including material tests, in order to derive the material stress–strain responses and key material properties of high strength steel, and connection tests, in order to study the structural behaviour and load-carrying capacities of high strength steel plate-to-plate connections and gusset plate connections. For S690 high strength steel plate-to-plate connections, tests were carried out on a total of 69 connection specimens with different bolt configurations and geometric dimensions, where 32 of them failing by net section fracture, 21 of them failing by bearing and 16 of them failing by block tearing. For S690 high strength steel gusset plate connections, a total of 23 angle-to-plate connection tests and 27 channel-to-plate connection tests were carried out and all the gusset plate connection specimens failed by net section fracture. The experimental programme was supplemented by a numerical modelling programme, where finite element models were firstly developed to replicate the experimental responses and then used to conduct parametric studies to generate further data over a wide range of geometric dimensions. On the basis of the experimental and numerical results, the underlying failure mechanisms and the effects of various parameters on structural behaviour and resistances were analysed and discussed. The obtained test and numerical data were used to assess the accuracy of the existing design rules for high strength steel plate-to-plate connections and gusset plate connections. For high strength steel plate-to-plate connections, the assessment results generally indicated that the existing codified design framework cannot capture the complex nature of connection behaviour and thus resulted in a low level of accuracy. Since many influencing geometric parameters cannot be fully separated and considered, it is difficult to develop pure mechanical-based design methods for high strength steel plate-to-plate connection. Therefore, a machine-learning-based design approach has been proposed and shown to yield substantially improved failure load and mode predictions than the codified design rules. For high strength steel gusset plate connections, the assessment results generally revealed that the existing codified design rules led to inaccurate failure load predictions, owing to the lack of consideration of the effects of material grade and influential geometric parameters. Therefore, a set of new mechanical-based design approaches were proposed and shown to offer more accurate and reliable failure load predictions over the design codes for high strength steel gusset plate connections. Doctor of Philosophy 2022-10-18T02:06:21Z 2022-10-18T02:06:21Z 2022 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Jiang, K. (2022). Structural behaviour of high strength steel bolted connections. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162400 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162400 10.32657/10356/162400 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University