Numerical modeling of thin steel roof battens under wind uplift loads


Autoria(s): Sivapathasundaram, Mayooran; Mahendran, Mahen
Contribuinte(s)

Iyer, Nagesh R.

Palani, G. S.

Kant, Tarun

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Extreme wind events such as tropical cyclones, tornadoes and storms are more likely to impact the Australian coastal regions due to possible climate changes. Such events can be extremely destructive to building structures, in particular, low-rise buildings with lightweight roofing systems that are commonly made of thin steel roofing sheets and battens. Large wind uplift loads that act on the roofs during high wind events often cause premature roof connection failures. Recent wind damage investigations have shown that roof failures have mostly occurred at the batten to rafter or truss screw connections. In most of these cases, the screw fastener heads pulled through the bottom flanges of thin steel roof battens. This roof connection failure is very critical as both roofing sheets and battens will be lost during the high wind events. Hence, a research study was conducted to investigate this critical pull-through failure using both experimental and numerical methods. This paper presents the details of numerical modeling and the results.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/84642/

Publicador

Research Publishing Services Singapore

Relação

DOI:10.3850/978-981-09-1139-3_INV08

Sivapathasundaram, Mayooran & Mahendran, Mahen (2014) Numerical modeling of thin steel roof battens under wind uplift loads. In Iyer, Nagesh R., Palani, G. S., & Kant, Tarun (Eds.) Proceedings of ICCMS 2014 5th International Congress on Computational Mechanics and Simulation, Research Publishing Services Singapore, Chennai, India, pp. 147-156.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 ICCMS

Fonte

School of Civil Engineering & Built Environment; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120200 BUILDING #120400 ENGINEERING DESIGN #Cold-formed steel structures #Light gauge steel roofing systems #Steel roof battens #Wind uplift loads #Pull-through failures #Numerical modeling #Failure criterion
Tipo

Conference Paper