Hysteretic behaviour of welded connections with highly inelastic panel zones

Author:

Skiadopoulos Andronikos1,Lignos Dimitrios G.1,Arita Masaki2,Hiroshima Satoru2

Affiliation:

1. École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Dept. Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering Lausanne Switzerland

2. Nippon Steel Corporation, Dept. of Research and Development, Chiyoda Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractThe current practice in capacity‐designed steel moment resisting frames (MRFs) worldwide allows for limited shear yielding in the column web panel zone. As such, inelastic deformations concentrate near the beam ends, thereby leading to flexural strength deterioration due to local buckling often at modest lateral drift demands. Experiments on post‐Northridge welded connections suggest that prior to a story drift angle of 5% rad, panel zone kinking does not induce fracture for panel zone shear distortions of up to 10γy. Within such a context, this paper presents an alternative design of a welded moment connection with highly inelastic panel zones. The connection features simplified weld details including a customised beveled backing bar that can be kept in place after the completion of the complete joint penetration welds at the beam flange‐to‐column flange joint. Full scale experiments suggest that the hysteretic response of the connection remains stable up until a story drift angle of 8% rad. The specimen did not exhibit visible structural damage prior to story drift angles of 4% rad, which are characteristic to a maximum considered earthquake. Modest local buckling occurred near the beam ends only after a story drift angle of 5% rad, which is a typical drift threshold in current collapse assessment methodologies. This paper summarises the primary findings of the experimental program for one of the test specimens.

Funder

Nippon Steel Corporation

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference35 articles.

1. AIJ(2012)Recommendations for design of connections in steel structures. Architectural Institute of Japan Tokyo (in Japanese).

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