Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns

The behavior of steel plate shear walls under the effects of lateral loads depends on the stiffness of the surrounding frame members. Previous research has quantified the minimum required stiffness of columns in the middle stories of steel plate shear wall systems. As the columns of the steel plate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dastfan, Mehdi
Other Authors: Driver, Robert G. (Civil and Environmental Engineering)
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1946
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-AEU.10048-1946
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-AEU.10048-19462011-12-13T13:53:36ZDriver, Robert G. (Civil and Environmental Engineering)Dastfan, Mehdi2011-06-01T21:48:13Z2011-06-01T21:48:13Z2011-06-01T21:48:13Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/10048/1946The behavior of steel plate shear walls under the effects of lateral loads depends on the stiffness of the surrounding frame members. Previous research has quantified the minimum required stiffness of columns in the middle stories of steel plate shear wall systems. As the columns of the steel plate shear wall system are subjected to both large axial forces and bending moments, use of composite columns is a viable option in this system. Among the different types of composite columns, the recently developed partially encased composite columns with built-up steel sections have some advantages over other types of composite columns and thus their performance as columns in steel plate shear wall systems needs to be studied. In the first part of this research, a numerical and analytical study has developed a new design parameter and determined the minimum required stiffness of end beams in end panels of the steel plate shear wall system. The effect of the rigidity of the frame connections on the uniformity of the tension field has also been studied in this part. The second part of this research includes two large scale tests on steel plate shear walls with built-up partially encased composite (PEC) columns. One of the test specimens was modular and the other one used reduced beam sections in the frame. The results of the tests show that the columns were stiff enough to anchor the infill plate. The PEC columns in these tests performed in a ductile manner. The overall system behavior was ductile, stable and the specimens showed good seismic behavior and redundancy. Based on the results and observations of this research, design recommendations for PEC columns used as the vertical boundary members of steel plate shear walls are provided.16977490 bytesapplication/pdfen_USsteel plate shear wallPEC columnflexibility parametermodular testRBS testductileDuctile steel plate shear walls with PEC columnsThesisDoctor of philosophyDoctoralCivil and Environmental EngineeringUniversity of Alberta2011-11Structural EngineeringCheng, J.J. Roger (Civil and Environmental Engineering)Adeeb, Samer (Civil and Environmental Engineering)Mohamed, Yasser (Civil and Environmental Engineering)Jar, P-Y Ben (Mechanical Engineering)Ricles, James M. (Civil and Environmental Engineering, Lehigh University)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic steel plate shear wall
PEC column
flexibility parameter
modular test
RBS test
ductile
spellingShingle steel plate shear wall
PEC column
flexibility parameter
modular test
RBS test
ductile
Dastfan, Mehdi
Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
description The behavior of steel plate shear walls under the effects of lateral loads depends on the stiffness of the surrounding frame members. Previous research has quantified the minimum required stiffness of columns in the middle stories of steel plate shear wall systems. As the columns of the steel plate shear wall system are subjected to both large axial forces and bending moments, use of composite columns is a viable option in this system. Among the different types of composite columns, the recently developed partially encased composite columns with built-up steel sections have some advantages over other types of composite columns and thus their performance as columns in steel plate shear wall systems needs to be studied. In the first part of this research, a numerical and analytical study has developed a new design parameter and determined the minimum required stiffness of end beams in end panels of the steel plate shear wall system. The effect of the rigidity of the frame connections on the uniformity of the tension field has also been studied in this part. The second part of this research includes two large scale tests on steel plate shear walls with built-up partially encased composite (PEC) columns. One of the test specimens was modular and the other one used reduced beam sections in the frame. The results of the tests show that the columns were stiff enough to anchor the infill plate. The PEC columns in these tests performed in a ductile manner. The overall system behavior was ductile, stable and the specimens showed good seismic behavior and redundancy. Based on the results and observations of this research, design recommendations for PEC columns used as the vertical boundary members of steel plate shear walls are provided. === Structural Engineering
author2 Driver, Robert G. (Civil and Environmental Engineering)
author_facet Driver, Robert G. (Civil and Environmental Engineering)
Dastfan, Mehdi
author Dastfan, Mehdi
author_sort Dastfan, Mehdi
title Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
title_short Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
title_full Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
title_fullStr Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
title_full_unstemmed Ductile steel plate shear walls with PEC columns
title_sort ductile steel plate shear walls with pec columns
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1946
work_keys_str_mv AT dastfanmehdi ductilesteelplateshearwallswithpeccolumns
_version_ 1716389215335350272