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Experimental Evaluation of Plate-Reinforced Steel Moment-Resisting Connections
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2002
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EngineeringExperimental EvaluationCold-formed SectionFema 267AMechanical EngineeringStructural AnalysisLocal BucklingStructural ApplicationStructural DesignFull ScaleHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelStructural SteelStructural MechanicsMechanics Of MaterialsStructural Engineering
Five cover-plate and five flange-plate single-sided steel moment-resisting beam–column assemblies were tested at full scale. Grade 50 steel was used for the W14×176 columns, the W30×99 beams, and all reinforcing plates. The procedures of FEMA 267A were used to design and detail the connections that included rectangular-, trapezoidal-, and swallowtail-shaped reinforcing plates. Cyclic and near-field loading histories were used to test the connections. None of the ten connections failed in a brittle manner; the strength of each connection degraded slowly due to local buckling of the beam web and flanges. The maximum beam plastic hinge rotations ranged between 2.3 and 3.9% rad. The cover-plate and flange-plate connections performed equally well but neither connection was subjected to large plastic strains at the face of the column. The performance of the tested plate-reinforced connections was best when rectangular reinforcing plates and three-sided fillet welds joining the reinforcing plate to the beam flange were used. Bracing of the beam bottom flange outside the plastic hinge zone to delay lateral-torsional buckling did not produce any significant improvement in connection hysteresis. Increased beam web compactness (smaller height to thickness) delayed the loss of strength and stiffness in the beam–column connection.