Litcius/Paper detail

Cyclic Behavior of Bolted Glued-Laminated Timber Brace Connections with Slotted-In Steel Plates

Zoe Baird, Joshua E. Woods, Christian Viau, Ghasan Doudak

2024Journal of Structural Engineering13 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper presents the experimental results of a study investigating the behavior of bolted glued-laminated (glulam) timber brace connections with slotted-in steel plates under monotonic and cyclic loading. A total of 12 brace specimens with one or two slotted-in steel plates and two different bolt sizes were studied with the aim to determine the ductility of the connections and brace assemblies. The use of self-tapping screws as perpendicular-to-grain reinforcement to prevent splitting and enhance brace ductility was also investigated. The results of the study showed that both connections in a brace can experience significant plastic deformations if the connections exhibit a postyield hardening response. In braces with connections that exhibited postyield softening, plastic deformations were limited to one of the brace connections, resulting in lower brace ductility ratios. The use of self-tapping screws was found to be effective at preventing splitting and increasing the connection yield and ultimate strengths, while also increasing the brace ductility when compared with an identical connection without reinforcement tested under cyclic loading.

Topics & Concepts

BraceStructural engineeringMaterials scienceBolted jointComposite materialEngineeringFinite element methodStructural Load-Bearing AnalysisWood Treatment and PropertiesStructural Engineering and Vibration Analysis