Abstract

Timber structures have garnered increasing attention owing to their sustainability and assemblability. Particularly, engineered wood products like cross-laminated timber (CLT) coupled with digital fabrication technologies have promoted the application of traditional mortise-tenon joints in modern mass timber structures. In this paper, a novel non-metallic dovetail joint was proposed to connect the perpendicular CLT wall and lintel. A total of nine specimens were tested under monotonic and cyclic loading to investigate the out-of-plane shear behavior with different widths of the tenon head. The failure modes of the joints were presented, and the mechanical properties including stiffness, strength, ductility and energy dissipation were compared and analyzed. A simplified strength model was developed to evaluate the shear strength of the joint. The experimental results revealed that the specimens mainly failed by timber splitting and crushing under monotonic loading due to the shear force and additional bending moment. The increase in the tenon head width of the dovetail joint from 70 mm to 105 mm resulted in a significant improvement in both stiffness and strength, with enhancements of more than 42 % and 54 %, respectively. All specimens exhibited similar failure modes but more severe timber crushing under cyclic loading. Due to the damage accumulation, the stiffness and strength of the dovetail joint degraded significantly. The specimen with the tenon head width of 84 mm exhibited the highest energy dissipation and relatively low strength degradation under cyclic loading. Additionally, it is recommended to use a ratio of tenon head width to CLT panel thickness at 4/5. The proposed strength model underestimated the load-carrying capacity of the joint generally due to the neglect of the contribution of the bending moment. This study provides base guidelines for the application of dovetail joints in CLT structures.

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