Direct strength design of cold-formed purlins Usyd R882

Direct strength design of cold-formed purlins Usyd R882

The Limit States Australian/New Zealand Standard AS/NZS 4600:2005 and the North American Specification for the Design of Cold-Formed Steel Structural Members 2001 (2004 Supplement) include the newly developed Direct Strength Method of Design (DSM). In both Standards, the method presented (Chapter 7 of AS/NZS 4600:2005, Appendix 1 of NAS) is limited to pure compression and pure bending. The situation of combined bending and shear as occurs in a continuous purlin system is not considered. In order to extend the DSM to purlin systems, it is necessary to prescribe and calibrate a method for combined bending and shear. Eight different test series on purlin sheeting systems with single, double and triple spans and both uplift and downwards load cases as well as screw and  concealed sheeting have been performed at the University of Sydney over a 10 year period. As many of these tests consisted of continuous lapped purlins where combined bending and shear occurred at the purlin section just outside the end of the lap, it is possible to use this test data to propose an extension to the DSM. Furthermore, calibration of the proposals using the limit states design methodology is included in the report This report makes two proposals for combined bending and shear, and calibrates them both for the full sets of vacuum rig test data.  By C H Pham amd G J Hancock, University of Sydney Research Report No. R891, June 2008. http://sydney.edu.au/engineering/civil/publications/index.shtml

Title
Direct strength design of cold-formed purlins Usyd R882
Publish Date
03 May 2018
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