Abstract
Monolayer cable nets have been widely applied in point-supported glass facades in recent years because of transparency, light weight and flexibility of construction. In this paper, work on the static load bearing performance of this type of cable net is described through the use of finite element analysis (FEA) and tests on a 1/10–scale model of a real project in P.R. China under construction. Firstly a method of analysis inverse to the sequence of erection and much different from conventional methods, is used to model the pre-stretching of cables with the aid of FEA to provide guidelines for the tests. Cable pre-stretching proceeds by three stages, then load bearing behaviour tests on the cable net are carried out both before and after the installation of glass panels. The agreement between the pre-stretching tests and the FEA analysis indicates that the inverse analysis method is convenient in calculation, and provides useful references for the pre-stretching of similar types of cable net in practical engineering. The nonlinear relationship found between loads and displacements just indicates the nonlinear properties of flexible cable nets. Before the installation of glass panels, the structural stiffness actually increases slowly with increasing external loads, and greater initial pre-tension is more beneficial to load bearing capacity of the structure. But too large an initial pre-tension may overload the supporting structures of the cable net. The increase in cable force due to external loads is small. Nevertheless, the stiffness of the glass panels themselves make a significant contribution to the overall structural stiffness, the contribution which becomes less obvious as the stiffness of the cable net itself increases.
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