| Literature DB >> 28793619 |
Ying Gao1,2,3, Yuxuan Wu4,5,6, Xudong Zhu7,8,9, Lei Zhu10, Zhiming Yu11,12,13, Yong Wu14.
Abstract
This paper presents the formulae and finite element analysis models for predicting the Modulus of Elastic (MOE) and Modulus of Rupture (MOR) of Cathay poplar finger-jointed glulam. The formula of the MOE predicts the MOE of Cathay poplar glulam glued with one-component polyurethane precisely. Three formulae are used to predict the MOR, and Equation (12) predicts the MOR of Cathay poplar glulam precisely. The finite element analysis simulation results of both the MOE and MOR are similar to the experimental results. The predicted results of the finite element analysis are shown to be more accurate than those of the formulae, because the finite element analysis considers the glue layers, but the formulae do not. Three types of typical failure modes due to bending were summarized. The bending properties of Cathay poplar glulam were compared to those of Douglas fir glulam. The results show that Cathay poplar glulam has a lower stiffness, but a marginally higher strength. One-component polyurethane adhesive is shown to be more effective than resorcinol formaldehyde resin adhesive for Cathay poplar glulam. This study shows that Cathay poplar has the potential to be a glulam material in China.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese domestic Cathay poplar; bending properties; checking calculation; finite element analysis; formulae; mechanical tests; structural glued-laminated timber (glulam)
Year: 2015 PMID: 28793619 PMCID: PMC5455385 DOI: 10.3390/ma8105362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Mean physical and mechanical properties of the lumber investigated in this study.
| Species | Thickness (mm) | Lumbers Grades | Density (kg·m−3) | Moisture Content (%) | MOE (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cathay poplar | 20 | I | 536 | 10.7 | 12,798 |
| II | 536 | 10.7 | 11,357 | ||
| III | 536 | 10.7 | 9,900 | ||
| 30 | I | 536 | 10.7 | 11,750 | |
| II | 536 | 10.7 | 11,297 | ||
| III | 536 | 10.7 | 10,430 | ||
| Douglas fir | 20 | II | 498 | 9.2 | 12,500 |
| 30 | II | 498 | 9.2 | 12,236 |
Figure 1MOE of sawn lumber versus the concentrated knot’s diameter ratio.
Specimen parameters. RF, resorcinol formaldehyde; PU, polyurethane; W, width; T, thickness.
| Species | Adhesive | Sectional Dimensions of Laminates (mm) * | Layers | Abbreviation | Sample Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cathay poplar | RF | 60 (W) × 30 (T) | 4 | PR4 | 3 |
| RF | 60 (W) × 20 (T) | 6 | PR6 | 3 | |
| PU | 60 (W) × 20 (T) | 6 | PO6 | 4 | |
| Douglas fir | PU | 60 (W) × 30 (T) | 4 | DO4 | 5 |
| PU | 60 (W) × 20 (T) | 6 | DO6 | 5 |
*: T represents the thickness of laminates.
Figure 2Cross-section of the glulam specimens.
Figure 3Bending test Method A (side view).
Figure 4Typical failure modes of specimens. (a) Shear failure of finger joint (PR4 and PR6); (b) shear failure of finger joint and splitting of timber (PO6); (c) splitting of timber (DO4 and DO6).
Figure 5Load displacement curves of mean value of the specimens from each series and single results.
Figure 6Scatter plot of MOR versus MOE for each series.
Experimental results of each series.
| Specimen | Maximum Load | Maximum Deflection (mm) | MOR (MPa) | MOE (MPa) | Bending Rigidity (MPa) | Ultimate Tensile Strain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PR4 | 23.24 | 59.67 | 68.37 | 8930 | 77.16 × 109 | 0.0034 |
| PR6 | 23.44 | 58.56 | 69.22 | 9243 | 79.86 × 109 | 0.0047 |
| PO6 | 24.33 | 49.75 | 71.04 | 11,119 | 96.07 × 109 | 0.0053 |
| DO4 | 22.33 | 27.86 | 65.22 | 18,195 | 157.20 × 109 | 0.0032 |
| DO6 | 23.77 | 28.96 | 69.41 | 18,971 | 163.91 × 109 | 0.0038 |
Figure 7Shear diagram and bending moment diagram.
MOE of the Cathay poplar glulam from the experimental tests and calculations.
| Specimen | Experimental Results (MPa) | Theoretical Results (MPa) | Error (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PR4 | 8930 | 11,113 | 24.4 |
| PR6 | 9243 | 11,441 | 23.8 |
| PO6 | 11,119 | 11,441 | 2.9 |
Figure 8Linear regression analysis of the MOR of glulam.
MOR of Cathay poplar glulam from the test and theoretical results.
| Specimen | Experimental Results (MPa) | Corrected Experimental Results (MPa) | Equation (10) | Equation (12) | Equation (14) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theoretical Results (MPa) | Error (%) | Theoretical Results (MPa) | Error (%) | Theoretical Results (MPa) | Error (%) | |||
| PR4 | 68.37 | 56.79 | 47.55 | −30.5 | 69.57 | −1.8 | 52.61 | −23.0 |
| PR6 | 69.22 | 57.49 | 51.31 | −25.9 | 70.24 | 1.5 | 76.53 | 10.6 |
| PO6 | 71.04 | 59.01 | 51.31 | −27.8 | 70.24 | −1.2 | 76.53 | 7.7 |
Figure 9Meshed finite element model with loads and constraints.
MOE and MOR of Cathay poplar glulam from the test and simulation results.
| Specimen | MOE | MOR | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental Results (MPa) | Simulation Results (MPa) | Error (%) | Experimental Results (MPa) | Simulation Results (MPa) | Error (%) | |
| PR4 | 8930 | 9732 | 9.0 | 68.37 | 63.04 | −5.3 |
| PR6 | 9243 | 9952 | 7.7 | 69.22 | 65.49 | −5.4 |
| PO6 | 11,119 | 11,439 | 2.8 | 71.04 | 68.24 | −3.9 |
Figure 10Experimental results of MOE (a) and MOR (b) compared to the calculation and simulation results.