Abstract

This paper aims to investigate the performance of typical cold-formed steel (CFS) beam-to-beam connections between floor bearers and floor joists through a series of full-scale experiments. The investigated connections consisted of a lipped channel (floor joist), an unlipped channel (floor bearer), a thin-walled clip angle (connector), and a self-drilling screw (fastener). In this study, customised T-shaped and H-shaped CFS connection specimens were tested to examine the performance under tension and shear loads, respectively. Two sizes of self-drilling screws, 10 G and 14 G, were used with the selected load bearing clip angle. The fabricated connection specimens were subjected to displacement-controlled tension and shear loads. The experiments uncovered the ultimate connection strengths, load-displacement relationships, and failure mechanisms of the designed CFS connections under the applied loads. Moreover, the experimental tensile and shear strengths of the connections were compared with the strengths predicted by the standard design equations. It was found that the screw pullout on the anchored leg of the clip angle was the main mode of failure under the tensile load. On the other hand, two different failure modes—fracturing of 10 G screws or shear buckling of the cantilevered leg of the clip angle with 14 G screws—were observed in the H-shaped specimen under the applied shear load. Among the designed connection specimens, the maximum tensile load capacity was 30.86 kN and the maximum shear load capacity 88.15 kN. The standard design calculations predicted screw pullout failure under tension, while the shear bucking failure mode of the clip angle under shear load was overlooked.

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