Abstract

Modern building structures must meet the requirements of efficiency and resource-saving. The main direction for implementing these requirements is to reduce the consumption of steel (14–16%) and save cement (10–12%). These tasks can be solved through the rational combination of concrete and steel when they work together and the use of high-strength materials. One embodiment of this task is the use of Concrete Filled Steel Tube (CFST) structures. The purpose of this study is to identify the possibility of using the Drucker-Prager model by comparing the results of test studies on short compressed Concrete Filled Steel Tube (CFST) elements with different strength and deformation characteristics of the concrete core to the results from finite element analysis (FEA) modelling of corresponding CFST elements. Additionally, the behaviour of a steel pipe without a concrete core was investigated. The results show that the FEA method used in this work is sufficiently accurate for studying the behaviours of short CFST elements. The modelling technique adopted in the study made it possible to consider the redistribution of stresses in the concrete and pipe dynamically. The stress distribution patterns inside the concrete during both linear and non-linear deformations of CFST elements, as well as the characteristics of the interaction between the concrete and pipe in the contact zone, have been revealed.

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