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The continuous strength method
219
Citations
21
References
2008
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelStructural OptimizationStructural SteelWork HardeningStructural EngineeringCross-section ClassificationStrength PropertyStressstrain AnalysisMaterials ScienceSolid MechanicsStructural ReliabilityContinuous Strength MethodStructural AnalysisLocal BucklingStructural MechanicsMechanics Of MaterialsSection Classification
Many of the principal concepts that underpin current metallic structural design codes were developed on the basis of bilinear (elastic, perfectly-plastic) material behaviour; such material behaviour lends itself to the concept of section classification. The continuous strength method represents an alternative treatment to cross-section classification, which is based on a continuous relationship between slenderness and (inelastic) local buckling and a rational exploitation of strain hardening. The development and application of the continuous strength method to structural steel design is described herein. Materials that exhibit a high degree of nonlinearity and strain hardening, such as aluminium, stainless steel and some high-strength steels, fit less appropriately into the framework of cross-section classification, and generally benefit to a greater extent from the continuous strength method. The method provides better agreement with test results in comparison to existing design codes, and offers increases in member resistance and a reduction in scatter of the prediction. An additional benefit of the proposed approach is that cross-section deformation capacity is explicitly determined in the calculations, thus enabling a more sophisticated and informed assessment of ductility supply and demand. Further developments to the method are under way.
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