Abstract
Cold-formed steel sections are often used as wall studs or floor joists; such sections often include web holes for ease of installation of the services. Web crippling at points of concentrated, or localised, load or reaction in thin-walled beams is well known to be a significant problem, particularly in the case of beams with slender webs, and is of high importance in the field of cold-formed steel members, as such members are generally not stiffened against this type of loading. In this paper, a combination of experimental tests and non-linear elasto-plastic finite element analyses are used to investigate the effect of such holes on web crippling under end-two-flange (ETF) loading condition. In the case of the tests with web openings, the web holes located at the mid-depth of the webs. A non-linear elasto-plastic finite element model is developed in this study, and the results compared against the laboratory test results; a good agreement was obtained in terms of both strength and failure modes.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 297-311 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Publication status | Published - 2012 |
Externally published | Yes |
Event | 21st International Specialty Conference on Cold-Formed Steel Structures - St. Louis, MO, United States Duration: 24 Oct 2012 → 25 Oct 2012 |
Conference
Conference | 21st International Specialty Conference on Cold-Formed Steel Structures |
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Country/Territory | United States |
City | St. Louis, MO |
Period | 24/10/12 → 25/10/12 |
Keywords
- Channel section
- Cold-formed steel
- Finite element analysis
- Web crippling
- Web openings