Due to the insufficient radial stiffness of the steel tube, the cracking of the weld and the plastic deformation of the string often occur under the cyclic loading of the hollow section pipe joint. In order to avoid such a failure, the overlapped K-joints were strengthened by pouring different concrete into the chords. Furthermore, to explore the detailed effect of filling different concrete in a chord on the hysteretic behavior of the overlapped K-joints, six full-scale specimens were fabricated by two forms, which included the circular chord and braces, the square chord and circular braces, and the low cyclic loading tests, which were carried out. The failure modes, hysteretic curves and skeleton curves of the joints were obtained, and the bearing capacity, ductility and energy dissipation of the joints were evaluated quantitatively. The results showed that plastic failure occurs on the surface of the chord of the joints without filling concrete, while the failure mode of the joints filled with concrete in the chords was the tensile failure of the chords at the weld of the brace toe, and the compressive braces had a certain buckling deformation; The strengthening measures of concrete filled with chord can effectively improve the mechanical properties of the K-joints, the delay of the plastic deformation of the chord, and improve the bearing capacity of the K-joints. Contrarily, the ductility coefficient and the energy dissipation ratio of K-joints decreased with the concrete filled in the chord. The hysteretic behavior of the K-joints with a circular chord and brace was slightly better than that of the K-joints with a square chord and circular brace, and the hysteretic behavior of the K-joints strengthened with fly ash concrete, which was better than that of the K-joints strengthened with ordinary concrete. The results of ANSYS (a large general finite element analysis software developed by ANSYS Company in the United States) analysis agreed well with the experimental results.
The weld form of intersecting joints in a steel tubular truss structure changes with the various intersecting curves. As the key role of joints in energy dissipation and seismic resistance, the weld is easy to damage, as a result the constitutive behavior of the weld is different from that of the base metal. In order to define the cumulative damage characteristic and study the constitutive behavior of welded metal with the influence of damage accumulation, low-cycle fatigue tests were carried out to evaluate overall response characteristics and to quantify variation of cyclic stress amplitude, unloading stiffness and energy dissipation capacity. The results show that the cyclic softening behavior of welding materials is apparent, however, the steel shows hardening behavior with the increase of cyclic cycles, while the cyclic stress amplitude, unloading stiffness, and energy dissipation capacity of the welding materials degenerate gradually. Based on the Ramberg–Osgood model and introducing the damage variable D, a hysteretic model of welding material with the effect of damage accumulation was established, including an initial loading curve, cyclic stress-strain curve, and hysteretic curve model. Further, the evolution equation of D was also built. The parameters reflecting the damage degradation were fitted by the test data, and the simulation results of the model were proved to be in good agreement with the test results.
The lifetime of hollow section tubular joints frequently can be shortened owing to the occurrence of the welded cracks and the plastic deformation of chords under the cyclic loading, because of the deficient radial bearing capacity of the steel tube. To avoid such failures, this paper proposes a novel method to strengthen the chord with double plates at the intersection of the chord and braces. To further investigate the efficiency of this strengthening method on hysteretic performance and energy depletion ability of the overlapped K-joints with hollow sections, two unreinforced K-joints and two reinforced K-joints were fabricated. By loading on the braces with collaborative cyclic loading, the joints failure modes, hysteresis curve, and skeleton curve were obtained. The bearing capacity, ductility, and energy depletion of the joints were assessed and the restoring force model of joints was proposed. The results show that the failure mode of the unreinforced joint is the plastic failure of the surface of the chord. For the K-RC1 (double-plate reinforced square hollow section tubular K-joints), cracks appeared at the junction weld between the through brace and the overlapped brace. However, cracks extended along the weld at the intersection of the chord and the through brace for K-CC1 (double-plate reinforced circular hollow section tubular K-joints). There is no obvious deformation on the chord surface of reinforced joints. Experimental results reveal that the mechanical properties of the joints can be improved effectively by such reinforcement measures and that the plastic deformation of the chord can also be restrained. Meanwhile, the reinforcement measures demonstrate the ability to avoid the risk of large stress concentration of the chord in the area where the braces and chords are intersected. The bearing capacity of the joint was increased; however, the ductility of the joint was weakened.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.