Experimental behaviour of ductile diagonal connections for rack supported warehouses
Preprint 2024 English
Authors
AN
Agnese Natali
FM
Francesco Morelli
CV
Cristian Vulcu
Abstract
1 min read
<title>Abstract</title> Steel racking systems are widely adopted for storage purposes: they are thin-walled structures composed of consecutive trusses, connected with beams on which the palletized goods are stored. Their geometry and structural configuration strongly depend on market and operator necessities, and, in modern applications, the racks can also function as the supporting structure of the warehouse itself in the form of Rack Supported or High-Bay Warehouses. With the increase of the overall geometric dimensions and the global weight of the stored material, the seismic action becomes more relevant for the design. Along these lines, we present the development and experimental testing of a dedicated seismic design approach for ductile steel racks, with particular attention to Rack Supported Warehouses. This approach exploits the ductility of trusses introduced via the plastic ovalization mechanism of the diagonal-to-upright connections while a tailored capacity design is used to assure the elastic behaviour of the rest of the structure and to keep the brittle failure mechanisms at bay.
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