Abstract

Steel-reinforced concrete (SRC) beams are commonly used in the transfer structures of high- and super-high-rise buildings since concrete-encased steel elements have good resistance to buckling and seismic performance. However, the full-length steel shapes utilized in SRC beams are ineffective and pose many construction challenges. This study proposes a new steel-reinforced concrete beam-square steel tube (SST) column joint in which the SRC beam is embedded with a partial-length steel shape. Experimental tests are conducted on three joint specimens with varying cross-sectional dimensions of the SRC beam and lengths of the steel shape. The experimental results show that all the specimens exhibit good deformation, load-carrying capacity, and stable hysteresis responses. The three specimens demonstrate a considerable strength drop at drifts exceeding 5%. Besides, significant plastic deformation occurred at the column base region and in a limited region of the steel beam flange near the beam-column joint. Finite element models are developed to study the effects of single-side steel length, shear stud spacing, and thickness of beam concrete cover on the seismic performance of the proposed joint. The elastic deformations that caused the total column drift were theoretically analyzed. The predicted joint initial rotational stiffness using the proposed equation agrees well with the test and numerical results. The study’s limitations are also discussed.

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