Abstract

Laminated fibre-reinforced polymer (FRP) tubes are increasingly used as compression members in large-span spatial structures due to their high bearing capacity, corrosion resistance, and superior stability compared to high-strength steel pipes. In this study, axial compression tests were conducted on slender BFRP tubes to evaluate their compression characteristics as compression members. The results indicated that BFRP tubes exhibited three distinct failure modes, namely local failure, critical failure, and buckling failure. Overall, buckling was identified as the primary mode of failure under compression. The stress–strain curves of BFRP tubes were characterized by three stages, including elastic, elastic-plastic, and plastic stages. To enable design-oriented approaches, two three-stage theoretical models for BFRP tubes were developed through experimental data analysis. The models predicted the stress–strain curves and the load-lateral deflection curves, taking into account the post-peak softening behaviour of the stress–strain curves. Comparisons between the test results and the predictions calculated using the proposed models indicated that they were in good agreement.

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