Buildings (Jul 2012)

Effects of Reinforcement Geometry on Strength and Stiffness in Adhesively Bonded Steel-Timber Flexural Beams

  • Dave Smedley,
  • Martin Ansell,
  • Parvez Alam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings2030231
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 231 – 244

Abstract

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A finite element model is developed to analyse, as a function of volume fraction, the effects of reinforcement geometry and arrangement within a timber beam. The model is directly validated against experimental equivalents and found to never be mismatched by more than 8% in respect to yield strength predictions. Yield strength increases linearly as a function of increasing reinforcement volume fraction, while the flexural modulus follows more closely a power law regression fit. Reinforcement geometry and location of reinforcement are found to impact both the flexural properties of timber-steel composite beams and the changes due to an increase in volume fraction.

Keywords