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10.32: Experimental study on high temperature elastic modulus of China made high strength structural steel
Author(s) -
Li GuoQiang,
Huang Lei,
Zhang Chao
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ce/papers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2509-7075
DOI - 10.1002/cepa.329
Subject(s) - elastic modulus , materials science , structural engineering , eurocode , dynamic modulus , reduction (mathematics) , composite material , dynamic mechanical analysis , engineering , mathematics , geometry , polymer
ABSTRACT High strength structural steel (HSSS) has better economic and environmental benefits than mild structural steel, and becomes more popular in the building construction projects. The current codes for fire safety design of steel structures is mainly developed based on the test data from mild structural steel and might be not applicable to the high strength structural steel. This paper reports an experimental study on the high temperature elastic modulus of China made high strength structural steel. Both static and dynamic test methods were used to determine the elastic modulus of Q550, Q690 and Q890 China grade steel at temperatures ranging from 20 °C to 800 °C. Suspended coupling bending resonance method was used to measure the dynamic elastic modulus. The reduction factors of elastic modulus from test data were compared with the reduction factors determined by current codes, including the Chinese code CECS200, the Eurocode 3, the American code AISC and the Austrian code AS4100, and by other researchers. The study found that unlike the static reduction factors (reduction factors determined by the static method) the dynamic reduction factors are not sensitive to the steel grade. The static elastic modulus is greater than the dynamic elastic modulus at low temperatures and is less than the dynamic modulus at high temperatures. Both the static and dynamic reduction factors of HSSS are greater than the elastic modulus reduction factors employed by the current codes. Design equation for dynamic elastic modulus of HSSS was derived from curve‐fitting of the test data.

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