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Investigation on the effects of activation strategies and service temperature on the pre-stress levels of Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Zhikang Deng
  • Lingzhen Li
  • Vlad Alexandru Silvestru
  • Elyas Ghafoori

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • ETH Zurich
  • Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Science and Technology (EMPA)
  • Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number119290
Number of pages15
JournalEngineering structures
Volume324
Early online date22 Nov 2024
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2025

Abstract

Glass beams have been widely used as structural elements. However, glass is brittle, and the load-carrying capacity of glass beams after cracking is quite low. Adhesively bonded pre-stressed iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA) tendons can effectively increase the initial glass cracking load, the post-cracking load-carrying capacity, and the deformability of glass beams. Activation, which involves controlled heating followed by natural cooling, is one of the key processes of such an application to attain the target pre-stress levels. The effectiveness of activation depends on the activation length (over which the Fe-SMA strips were activated), anchorage length and activation temperature. A deep understanding of the activation strategy is crucial for maximizing pre-stress levels while avoiding premature failures such as glass breakage or debonding during activation. In this study, first, activation strategies for Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints were investigated experimentally by considering various activation temperatures and activation lengths, aiming to attain high pre-stress levels while avoiding glass breakage and debonding. Second, the effect of elevated service temperature (50 °C and 80 °C) on the pre-stress loss was investigated for the same specimens. Third, a finite element model was developed to investigate the different activation strategies further. The results showed that (1) the segmented activation strategy improved stress concentration compared with the single-cycle activation strategy, (2) the pre-stress was completely lost when the service temperature was 50 °C and 80 °C, (3) longer activation lengths resulted in a relatively lower pre-stress level, and (4) increasing the activation temperature substantially raised the pre-stress level. The findings in this research will contribute to the efficient design and application of pre-stressing glass elements using adhesively bonded Fe-SMA tendons.

Keywords

    Activation strategy, Bond behaviour, Epoxy adhesive, Glass, Iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA), Pre-stress loss, Temperature effect

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Investigation on the effects of activation strategies and service temperature on the pre-stress levels of Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints. / Deng, Zhikang; Li, Lingzhen; Silvestru, Vlad Alexandru et al.
In: Engineering structures, Vol. 324, 119290, 01.02.2025.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

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abstract = "Glass beams have been widely used as structural elements. However, glass is brittle, and the load-carrying capacity of glass beams after cracking is quite low. Adhesively bonded pre-stressed iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA) tendons can effectively increase the initial glass cracking load, the post-cracking load-carrying capacity, and the deformability of glass beams. Activation, which involves controlled heating followed by natural cooling, is one of the key processes of such an application to attain the target pre-stress levels. The effectiveness of activation depends on the activation length (over which the Fe-SMA strips were activated), anchorage length and activation temperature. A deep understanding of the activation strategy is crucial for maximizing pre-stress levels while avoiding premature failures such as glass breakage or debonding during activation. In this study, first, activation strategies for Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints were investigated experimentally by considering various activation temperatures and activation lengths, aiming to attain high pre-stress levels while avoiding glass breakage and debonding. Second, the effect of elevated service temperature (50 °C and 80 °C) on the pre-stress loss was investigated for the same specimens. Third, a finite element model was developed to investigate the different activation strategies further. The results showed that (1) the segmented activation strategy improved stress concentration compared with the single-cycle activation strategy, (2) the pre-stress was completely lost when the service temperature was 50 °C and 80 °C, (3) longer activation lengths resulted in a relatively lower pre-stress level, and (4) increasing the activation temperature substantially raised the pre-stress level. The findings in this research will contribute to the efficient design and application of pre-stressing glass elements using adhesively bonded Fe-SMA tendons.",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigation on the effects of activation strategies and service temperature on the pre-stress levels of Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints

AU - Deng, Zhikang

AU - Li, Lingzhen

AU - Silvestru, Vlad Alexandru

AU - Ghafoori, Elyas

AU - Taras, Andreas

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2025/2/1

Y1 - 2025/2/1

N2 - Glass beams have been widely used as structural elements. However, glass is brittle, and the load-carrying capacity of glass beams after cracking is quite low. Adhesively bonded pre-stressed iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA) tendons can effectively increase the initial glass cracking load, the post-cracking load-carrying capacity, and the deformability of glass beams. Activation, which involves controlled heating followed by natural cooling, is one of the key processes of such an application to attain the target pre-stress levels. The effectiveness of activation depends on the activation length (over which the Fe-SMA strips were activated), anchorage length and activation temperature. A deep understanding of the activation strategy is crucial for maximizing pre-stress levels while avoiding premature failures such as glass breakage or debonding during activation. In this study, first, activation strategies for Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints were investigated experimentally by considering various activation temperatures and activation lengths, aiming to attain high pre-stress levels while avoiding glass breakage and debonding. Second, the effect of elevated service temperature (50 °C and 80 °C) on the pre-stress loss was investigated for the same specimens. Third, a finite element model was developed to investigate the different activation strategies further. The results showed that (1) the segmented activation strategy improved stress concentration compared with the single-cycle activation strategy, (2) the pre-stress was completely lost when the service temperature was 50 °C and 80 °C, (3) longer activation lengths resulted in a relatively lower pre-stress level, and (4) increasing the activation temperature substantially raised the pre-stress level. The findings in this research will contribute to the efficient design and application of pre-stressing glass elements using adhesively bonded Fe-SMA tendons.

AB - Glass beams have been widely used as structural elements. However, glass is brittle, and the load-carrying capacity of glass beams after cracking is quite low. Adhesively bonded pre-stressed iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA) tendons can effectively increase the initial glass cracking load, the post-cracking load-carrying capacity, and the deformability of glass beams. Activation, which involves controlled heating followed by natural cooling, is one of the key processes of such an application to attain the target pre-stress levels. The effectiveness of activation depends on the activation length (over which the Fe-SMA strips were activated), anchorage length and activation temperature. A deep understanding of the activation strategy is crucial for maximizing pre-stress levels while avoiding premature failures such as glass breakage or debonding during activation. In this study, first, activation strategies for Fe-SMA-to-glass adhesively bonded joints were investigated experimentally by considering various activation temperatures and activation lengths, aiming to attain high pre-stress levels while avoiding glass breakage and debonding. Second, the effect of elevated service temperature (50 °C and 80 °C) on the pre-stress loss was investigated for the same specimens. Third, a finite element model was developed to investigate the different activation strategies further. The results showed that (1) the segmented activation strategy improved stress concentration compared with the single-cycle activation strategy, (2) the pre-stress was completely lost when the service temperature was 50 °C and 80 °C, (3) longer activation lengths resulted in a relatively lower pre-stress level, and (4) increasing the activation temperature substantially raised the pre-stress level. The findings in this research will contribute to the efficient design and application of pre-stressing glass elements using adhesively bonded Fe-SMA tendons.

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KW - Bond behaviour

KW - Epoxy adhesive

KW - Glass

KW - Iron-based shape memory alloy (Fe-SMA)

KW - Pre-stress loss

KW - Temperature effect

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U2 - 10.1016/j.engstruct.2024.119290

DO - 10.1016/j.engstruct.2024.119290

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85209723469

VL - 324

JO - Engineering structures

JF - Engineering structures

SN - 0141-0296

M1 - 119290

ER -

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