Abstract
Many examples of glass loadbearing structures such as handrails, panes, beams and columns can be found in modern architecture. Most of these elements are made of laminated glass panels. There is a general lack of knowledge about the transfer of shear forces between the glass plies in perpendicularly-loaded laminated panels. This transfer depends significantly on the stiffness of the polymeric interlayer, which is time-dependent and temperature-dependent. There are several computational methods for the design of laminated glass that take the shear coupling of the glass plies into account, e.g. analytical methods, numerical modeling and also the draft of European code. These methods need to be verified experimentally. This paper reports on rectangular double-laminated glass panels in a shortterm displacement controlled four-point bending test with an EVA and with a PVB interlayer under a constant temperature. These tests were performed at CTU in Prague. Our experimental results show that panels with an EVA interlayer had greater bending stiffness than panels laminated with PVB and achieved higher ultimate load values. The experimental data were further compared with simplified analytical methods, such as the European draft prEN 16612 and the Enhanced Effective Thickness approach and also a numerical FEM model. Numerical and EET methods results were in good agreement with the experimental data. The way in which the specimens broke was a characteristic feature of laminated glass. The shards remained attached to the interlayer, proving that laminated glass panels can be used safely above the heads of users of the structure. Simplified methods and numerical models validated by experimental tests on perpendicularly-loaded laminated glass panels enable these structures to be designed safely and economically for practical uses.
Highlights
Laminated glass as a composition of two or more glass plies bonded together with a polymeric interlayer is a subject of an intensive research (Serafinavičius et al, 2013)
This paper introduces experimental data obtained from four-point bending tests of double laminated glass panels with EVA interlayers and PVB interlayers performed at the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the Czech Technical University in Prague
The Enhanced Effective Thickness approach (EET) is a simple approximate method based on minimizing the strain energy functional and the aim is to find a suitable approximation of the response of the laminated glass beam using appropriate deflection functions (Galuppi et al, 2012)
Summary
Laminated glass as a composition of two or more glass plies bonded together with a polymeric interlayer is a subject of an intensive research (Serafinavičius et al, 2013). There are several ways how to design perpendicularly-loaded laminated glass structures when the stiffness of the interlayer is a factor that needs to be taken into consideration. This paper introduces experimental data obtained from four-point bending tests of double laminated glass panels with EVA interlayers and PVB interlayers performed at the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the Czech Technical University in Prague. An experimentally verified analytical calculation with satisfactory precision is a good tool for designing laminated glass structures that are economical and safe
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More From: International Journal of Structural Glass and Advanced Materials Research
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