Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4923308 Journal of Constructional Steel Research 2017 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
This study is motivated by increasingly prevalent use of high strength steel and concrete materials in high-rise buildings to achieve better structural performance with less material usage. Previous studies and many modern design codes place some limits on the strength of steel and concrete for designing steel-concrete composite members, attributed to insufficient test data and design experience on their applications in construction. With this research gap being identified, an experimental program has been carried out to investigate the composite behaviour of concrete filled steel tubes (CFST) employing high tensile strength steel (HTS) and ultra-high strength concrete (UHSC). Both concentric and eccentric compression loads were applied to evaluate the overall buckling resistances and moment-axial force interaction with second-order effect considered. The yield strength of HTS under the investigation was about 800 N/mm2 and the concrete compressive cylinder strength was up to 200 N/mm2. To examine the test results, the rotational stiffness of semi-rigid end supports was analytically derived and the stress-strain models of HTS and UHSC were properly calibrated to predict the composite behaviour through finite element analysis. The Eurocode 4 approach was then checked regarding its applicability to the said high- and ultra-high strength construction materials for composite design. A new database including 1160 test data was established to further study the reliability of the use of HTS and UHSC, and suggestions were made to extend the Eurocode 4 design approach.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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