Abstract

Environmental and urbanisation challenges have encouraged steady growth of mass timber structures where cross laminated timber (CLT) stands out in applications as full-size wall, floor, or beam elements. Beam elements are used mainly in situations where cross layers have a reinforcing effect on the tensile stress perpendicular to the beam axis, such as when introducing holes or notches, which is common practice in beams, due to engineering, installation, or architectural requirements. This paper presents experimental investigations of CLT beams with holes or notches for comparison and validation of an analytical model provided in the literature. Different sizes of holes and notches as well as different placements of the holes were considered in the experiments. All relevant failure modes were analysed and discussed in detail. Two predominant failure modes were indicated, i.e., bending failure and shear failure in crossing areas (mode III). Results further indicate that reduced lamination widths near the hole, notch, or element edges have a relatively small influence on the beam strength. Parametric studies indicate net shear failure (mode II) and tensile failure perpendicular to the beam axis as the critical failure modes in most of the considered cases, indicating their strong underestimation in design verifications according to the analytical model.

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