Abstract

The existing research primarily focuses on wood-concrete composite beams, with limited studies on the bending performance and effective width of wood-concrete composite slabs. A full-scale composite slab with screw connections was constructed and subjected to static load testing. The study extensively investigated the ultimate bearing capacity, load-deflection curves, interface slips, strain distributions of cross-section and effective width of the wood-concrete composite slab. It was found that the failure mechanism of the composite slab involved both bending and tensile failure of the wood beams. As the applied load intensified, a marked augmentation in the longitudinal strain of the concrete slab was observed; along the width direction, the longitudinal strain of concrete slab manifested a curved distribution. The precise determination of the effective width of the concrete slab within the composite floor could be accurately achieved via the utilization of a simplified computational approach. In order to simplify the analysis, the M-shaped section of composite slab was approximated as T-section composite beams when evaluating the bending behavior. The linear-elastic model was shown to be accurate in predicting the bending stiffness and load-carrying capacity of composite slabs.

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