Title: jsceohp
1Cyclic Elastoplastic Analysis and Stability
Evaluation of Steel Braces of Hollow Section
Iraj H.P. Mamaghani Assistant Professor
University of North Dakota SEI Structures
Congress April 24-26, 2008 Vancouver, BC,
Canada
2Outlines
- Introduction
- Parameters Concerning Seismic Design and
Ductility Evaluation of Cold-formed Steel Braces
of Circular Hollow Sections - FEM Modeling and Numerical Analysis Under Cyclic
Loads - Effects of Structural and Material Parameters on
Cyclic Inelastic Behavior - Conclusions
3- Steel Braced Frames
- Structural efficiency in providing significant
lateral - strength and stiffness
- Avoiding the brittle fracture found in
beam-to-column - connections in moment resisting steel frames
Steel Brace Types
4Capacity Design Procedure
- Concentrically Braced Frames
- Seismic Design Steel Specifications
CAN-CSAS16.1 1989 -
AISC 1997 - Requires yielding in the braces as primary
members - Avoiding possible catastrophic failure by
brace rupture - in the event of a severe seismic loading.
- The secondary members of the frame should
remain elastic - and hence carry forces induced by the
yielding members
- Performance-Based Design Specifications
- requires accurate predictions of inelastic
limit states up to - structural collapse
5Seismic Design Philosophy? Under severe
earthquakes, braces are allowed to undergo
compression buckling or tensile yield to
dissipate the imposed energy while columns and
collector beams respond elastically.
- Understanding the behavior of the bracing
members - under idealized cyclic loading is an
important step in - the careful design of steel braced frames.
6Type of Braces
Tension-Only Braces Designed to resist tensile
force having almost no compressive
strength. Tension-Compression Braces Provide
better performance under cyclic loading
7- Cyclic behavior of steel braces
- material nonlinearity
- - residual stresses
- - yield plateau
- - strain hardening
- - Bauschinger effect
- structural nonlinearity
- - brace slenderness parameter
- - cross-section slenderness
- width-to-thickness ratio
- radius-to-thickness ratio
- - initial out of straightness of the
brace - boundary condition
- loading history
8Physical Phenomena
- yielding in tension
- buckling in compression
- postbuckling deterioration of compressive load
capacity - deterioration of axial stiffness with cycling
- low cycle fatigue fractures at plastic regions
9 Characteristic Parameters of Steel Tubular
Braces
Section Slenderness
(Box Hollow Section)
(Circular Hollow Section)
Brace Slenderness Ratio Parameter
10Circular Hollow Section
Plastic Design Limits AISC(1997)
Non-Compact Sections AISC(1997)
11 Brace Slenderness Limit (AISC 1997)
Special Concentrically Braced Frames
Ordinary Concentrically Braced Frames
12Finite Element Analysis (ABAQUS)
S4R Shell Element Three dimensional Double
curved Four node with six degrees of freedom
per node Bilinear interpolation Reduced
integration Geometrical Nonlinearity
Updated Lagrangian Formulation Material
Nonlinearity KH, IH, 2SM Modified
Newton-Raphson Method Coupled with
displacement control Displacement Convergence
Criterion 10-5
13Elchalakani et al. Tests (2003)
14Material Model
- AS 1163 grade C350L0 (equivalent to ASTM A500
tubes) - Trilinear Stress-Strain Material
- Kinematic Hardening Rule
-
15Finite Element Meshing and Analysis Program
I. Original Meshing Pattern 2100 shell
elements (70 elements along the brace length and
30 elements in the circumferential direction)
II. Fine Mesh total number of 3300 shell
elements doubling the mesh number at the central
segment and at the ends of the brace III. Load
Step-Increment Analysis (meshing same as Type I)
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17Loading Program
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18Example 1 S7A Circular Brace Non-Compact Member
Having Inelastic Behavior m18.24 gt m10 likely
to occur near source excitation
Normalized axial load versus axial displacemen
19Effects of mesh density and load steps
Normalized axial load versus axial displacemen
20Deflection Local Buckling Progress
Deflection at the top face (Node 1088) and bottom
face (Node 1104) of the cross-section at midspan.
Local buckling progress at midspan
21Deformed configuration of brace S7A at the end of
compression and tension loading
Compression
Tension
22Example 2 S7B Circular Brace
Deflection at midspan
Axial load vs. axial displacement
23Step by step deformation S4B
Undeformed
Loop 1
Loop 3
Loop 5
Loop 7
Loop 9
24Example 3 S7C Circular Brace
Axial load vs. axial displacement
Deflection at midspan
25Step by step deformation S4C
26Step by step deformation S4C
27Deformed configuration of brace S7C at the end of
compression loading
28CONCLUSIONS
- Some important parameters considered in the
practical seismic design and ductility evaluation
of steel braces of tubular sections were
presented. - The inelastic cyclic behavior of cold-formed
steel braces of circular hollow sections was
examined through finite element analysis using
ABAQUS and employing a tri-linear kinematic
strain hardening model to account for material
nonlinearity.
29Than You Questions?