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Steel and Composite Structures Volume 49, Number 2, October 25 2023 , pages 143-159 DOI: https://doi.org/10.12989/scs.2023.49.2.143 |
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Stability of structural steel tubular props: An experimental, analytical, and theoretical investigation |
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Zaid A. Al-Sadoon, Samer Barakat, Farid Abed and Aroob Al Ateyat
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Abstract | ||
Recently, the design of scaffolding systems has garnered considerable attention due to the increasing number of scaffold collapses. These incidents arise from the underestimation of imposed loads and the site-specific conditions that restrict the application of lateral restraints in scaffold assemblies. The present study is committed to augmenting the buckling resistance of vertical support members, obviating the need for supplementary lateral restraints. To achieve this objective, experimental and computational analyses were performed to assess the axial load buckling capacity of steel props, composed of two hollow steel pipes that slide into each other for a certain length. Three full-scale steel props with various geometric properties were tested to construct and validate the analytical models. The total unsupported length of the steel props is 6 m, while three pins were installed to tighten the outer and inner pipes in the distance they overlapped. Finite Element (FE) modeling is carried out for the three steel props, and the developed models were verified using the experimental results. Also, theoretical analysis is utilized to verify the FE analysis. Using the FE-verified models, a parametric study is conducted to evaluate the effect of different inserted pipe lengths on the steel props' axial load capacity and lateral displacement. Based on the results, the typical failure mode for the studied steel props is global elastic buckling. Also, the prop's elastic buckling strength is sensitive to the inserted length of the smaller pipe. A threshold of minimum inserted length is one-third of the total length, after which the buckling strength increases. The present study offers a prop with enhanced buckling resistance and introduces an equation for calculating an equivalent effective length factor (k), which can be seamlessly incorporated into Euler's buckling equation, thereby facilitating the determination of the buckling capacity of the enhanced props and providing a pragmatic engineering solution. | ||
Key Words | ||
elastic flexural buckling; finite element modeling; load-carrying capacity; scaffold shoring systems; structural steel pipe | ||
Address | ||
Zaid A. Al-Sadoon, Samer Barakat and Aroob Al Ateyat:Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates Farid Abed:Department of Civil Engineering, American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates | ||