Experimental Study on the Rotation Capacity of Cold-Formed Steel Beams

Abstract

The rotation capacity of cold-formed steel (CFS) beams has been evaluated through experimental investigation. Studies on different structural levels have been performed. At the element level, different profile slenderness ratios have been considered, and different section shapes have been investigated by increasing the number of flange bends: C-section and curved-section, which represents an infinite number of flange bends. At the connection level, a web bolted moment resistant type of connection using through plate has been adopted. In web bolted connections without out-of-plane stiffeners, premature web buckling results in early loss of strength. Hence, out-of-plane stiffeners have been examined to delay web and flange buckling and to produce relatively high moment strength and ductility. The experimental results have been compared with numerical results obtained by the authors in another paper work. The results revealed that increasing the number of flange bends will not in all cases enhance the behavior. Meanwhile, the use of out-of-plane stiffeners can increase the seismic energy dissipation, the moment strength and the ductility, when compared with the case without stiffeners.

Department(s)

Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering

Comments

Cairo University, Grant None

Keywords and Phrases

Cold-formed steel beam; Experimental study; Out-of-plane stiffeners; Rotation capacity; Section shape; Slenderness ratio

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

0143-974X

Document Type

Article - Journal

Document Version

Citation

File Type

text

Language(s)

English

Rights

© 2024 Elsevier, All rights reserved.

Publication Date

01 Jun 2016

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