Abstract

This study delved into the transition mechanism of loading rate on the failure mode transition in steel-ultra-high performance concrete-steel (SUHPCS) composite plates under concentrated low-velocity impact loads. A series of drop-weight tests elucidated that, as impact velocity escalated, the composite plate shifts from local punching failure, characterized by circumferential cracks, to overall flexural failure, marked by radial cracks resembling yield lines. Given the constraints in capturing strain data in drop-weight test, a 3D nonlinear structural analysis using Abaqus software was conducted. This numerical simulation method was validated by drop-weight test results in terms of crack patterns and impact force time histories. Moreover, structural dynamic punching and flexural loads at a specific loading rate were obtained with the assistance of the dynamic increase factor (DIF). Failure mode could be judged through comparison between the two critical loads. The discrepancy in strain sensitivity exhibited by steel plates and UHPC accounted for the transition in failure modes of the SUHPCS composite plates. DIFs for UHPC compressive strength and steel plate strength were lower than DIF for UHPC tensile strength, as these factors were around 1.5, 1.7 and 2.6, respectively. Parameter analysis showed that the critical transition impact velocity for a composite plate with a core thickness of 80 mm was 11 m/s, surpassing the 13 m/s threshold for a composite plate with a 100 mm-thick core. Moreover, changes in DIFs of UHPC and steel strengths were less than 2 % with various impact masses and the composite plate maintained the same failure mode.

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