Direct Strength Method for the Design of Cold-Formed Steel Sections Under Localised Loading
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Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Nguyen, Van VinhAbstract
The main objective of the thesis is the development of the Direct Strength Method (DSM) for the design of cold-formed steel sections under general localised loading. In order to calibrate the DSM equations, it is necessary to have three main input variables which are the buckling ...
See moreThe main objective of the thesis is the development of the Direct Strength Method (DSM) for the design of cold-formed steel sections under general localised loading. In order to calibrate the DSM equations, it is necessary to have three main input variables which are the buckling load, the yield load and the experimental data. The first objective of this research is the development of the Finite Strip Method (FSM) theory for analysis of thin-walled sections under localised loading with general end boundary conditions to determine the buckling load as described in Chapters 3 and 4 of the thesis. The theory is included in Version 2.0 of the THIN-WALL-2 program which can be used for analysing structural members under generalised loading conditions as described in Chapter 5. The second objective is the formulation of plastic mechanism models to estimate the yield load of thin-walled sections subjected to localised loading. In order to establish these models, observations are performed from experiments to ascertain the failure modes of structural members under localised loading with different cross-sections, load cases and flange fastening conditions. From the data, new simple plastic mechanism models are built-up based on the concept of the balance between the internal energy of the structural member and the external energy of the applied loads to estimate the yield load as described in Chapter 6. The third objective is collating the experimental data of thin-walled sections under localised loading. The data is collected from previous literature for different types of cross-sections: un-lipped plain-C, lipped plain-C, SupaCee and Dimond Hi-Span channel (DHS) sections subjected to all load cases. In addition, both flange fastened and unfastened conditions are assembled in the experimental database as described in Chapter 6. From these three input variables, the DSM design equations are proposed for structural members under general localised loading. The method is a consistent and simplified model generalised for all localised load cases. It includes both an inelastic reserve component as observed in testing and a yield load component. Also, a reliability analysis calibration is performed to validate the accuracy of the DSM predictions with the collected experimental data as described in Chapter 7.
See less
See moreThe main objective of the thesis is the development of the Direct Strength Method (DSM) for the design of cold-formed steel sections under general localised loading. In order to calibrate the DSM equations, it is necessary to have three main input variables which are the buckling load, the yield load and the experimental data. The first objective of this research is the development of the Finite Strip Method (FSM) theory for analysis of thin-walled sections under localised loading with general end boundary conditions to determine the buckling load as described in Chapters 3 and 4 of the thesis. The theory is included in Version 2.0 of the THIN-WALL-2 program which can be used for analysing structural members under generalised loading conditions as described in Chapter 5. The second objective is the formulation of plastic mechanism models to estimate the yield load of thin-walled sections subjected to localised loading. In order to establish these models, observations are performed from experiments to ascertain the failure modes of structural members under localised loading with different cross-sections, load cases and flange fastening conditions. From the data, new simple plastic mechanism models are built-up based on the concept of the balance between the internal energy of the structural member and the external energy of the applied loads to estimate the yield load as described in Chapter 6. The third objective is collating the experimental data of thin-walled sections under localised loading. The data is collected from previous literature for different types of cross-sections: un-lipped plain-C, lipped plain-C, SupaCee and Dimond Hi-Span channel (DHS) sections subjected to all load cases. In addition, both flange fastened and unfastened conditions are assembled in the experimental database as described in Chapter 6. From these three input variables, the DSM design equations are proposed for structural members under general localised loading. The method is a consistent and simplified model generalised for all localised load cases. It includes both an inelastic reserve component as observed in testing and a yield load component. Also, a reliability analysis calibration is performed to validate the accuracy of the DSM predictions with the collected experimental data as described in Chapter 7.
See less
Date
2017-08-08Faculty/School
Faculty of Engineering and Information Technologies, School of Civil EngineeringAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare