The present invention generally relates to insulated concrete wall panels, and more particularly to shear ties or connectors for such panels.
“Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design” (LEED) certified, environmentally-friendly construction has become standard practice in the United States. Building owners are willing to pay a premium overhead cost in order to save on life-cycle costs and receive additional financial benefits from the government by meeting LEED standards. To minimize operational costs and obtain LEED certification, building cladding systems must be thermally efficient. The precast concrete industry responded to consumer needs by developing the insulated precast wall panel, a building envelope comprised of a layer of insulating foam, typically expanded or extruded polystyrene, sandwiched between an external and internal layer (wythe) of concrete as shown in
Intuitively by replacing concrete with foam reduces the strength of the wall panel. By removing the interior concrete, the mechanism to transfer the required interface shear is no longer present thus reducing the out-of-plane flexural strength of the panel. In order for insulated wall panels to have the same strength as a solid concrete wall panel, the interior and exterior concrete wythes must act in unison (compositely) to resist applied loads. The term “composite behavior” is a term of art referring to the ability of the insulated wall panel to behave under load as a single unitary structure. Historically, to achieve composite behavior strong metal devices (shear ties) physically connected the exterior and interior concrete wythes as shown in
Today, several proprietary shear tie systems exist that utilize thermally resistive material to mitigate thermal bridging and condensation effects. However, tie systems available on the market today may lack the strength required to economically reach composite action, lack deformation capacity, allow concrete to pass along the tie creating a thermal bridge, or are subject to large installation tolerances creating a high variance in the actual panel strength.
Although insulated panels are designed utilizing shear ties to meet a prescribed demand and thermal resistance, they often suffer from quality control problems during fabrication. For shear ties to reach the capacity for which they are designed, they must be placed at specific locations and with defined embedment otherwise the capacity of the ties may be controlled by the strength of the concrete, due to pull-out or pry-out failure mechanisms, rather than the strength of the tie. Additionally, in poorly executed installations concrete may bleed past the shear tie creating a large thermal bridge reducing the overall panel thermal resistance. To ensure proper installation, extra effort must be taken by the fabricator during shear tie placement translating to a longer production time and additional expense.
Finally, shear ties currently available are designed to withstand conventional life cycle loads such as lifting during construction and wind loads during service; however, no shear ties exist which account for extreme events such as a blast load. Most government facilities mandate both energy and security requirements. An ideal solution to both requirements is a precast insulated wall panel with shear ties designed for high explosive detonations. In blast design, the primary mode of energy dissipation is panel deformation. By designing a shear tie with a large amount of ductility, the wall panel can displace more energy generated during a detonation before failing reducing the risk to inhabiting occupants.
An improved shear tie for a concrete wall panel is desired.
A new shear tie system is provided that is strong enough to allow an insulated concrete composite panel to reach the nominal moment capacity, highly deformable, prevent concrete passage, and designed to reduce installation tolerances. Additionally, by creating a deformable shear tie the maximum attainable panel deflection is increased, creating an additional market for blast and impact applications where energy dissipation through panel deflection is required.
The shear tie was developed based on first principles, ACI 318-11 code requirements, finite element analysis (FEA), and ergonomics. The shear tie is further designed to fit comfortably in the hand for ease of installation during concrete panel formation and fabricated from a high performance thermally resistive fiberglass composite. In one non-limiting implementation, the shear tie is made of glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) such as without limitation a thermoset polyester resin with a unidirectional fiber orientation, as further described herein.
The comb shape of the shear tie with pointed ends was selected to allow easy penetration through the insulation layer during panel formation. The ergonomic design allows for quick installation allowing a single worker to install more ties in the same amount of time. Additionally, the comb shape automatically forces the tie to stop once the base of the comb with installers fingers between the elongated tines or anchor elements of the tie reaches the insulation panel thereby ensuring correct and consistent installation every time. This also ensures that a top portion of the open slots between the anchor elements s remain between the base of the tie and the insulation panel which is later filled with concrete during the final wythe pour to further interlock the tie with the final wythe.
According to an aspect of the invention, an insulated composite structural wall panel includes: a first concrete layer; a second concrete layer; an insulation layer disposed between the first and second concrete layers; a shear tie embedded in the wall panel and connecting the first concrete layer to the second concrete layer, the shear tie having a longitudinal axis, a base portion, and a plurality of longitudinally elongated anchor elements extending therefrom, the shear tie constructed of a non-metallic material that exhibits an elastic-plastic response to an applied shear load; each of the anchor elements having a length, an upper portion disposed in the first concrete layer, a lower portion defining a terminal distal end disposed in the second concrete layer, and an intermediate portion disposed in the insulation layer; a first flexural hinge formed in each anchor element at a first interface between the first concrete layer and the insulation layer; wherein when a transverse shear load is applied to the anchor elements by lateral movement of the first or second concrete layers, the intermediate portion of each anchor element is transversely and angularly deformed in an elastic-plastic manner about the first flexural hinge at the concrete to insulation layer interfaces. In one implementation, the shear tie is formed of a unidirectional fiber reinforced polymer matrix; the fibers in each anchor element running in a direction along the length of each anchor element. In certain implementations, a second flexural hinge is formed in each anchor element at a second interface between the second concrete layer and the insulation layer, wherein each anchor element is transversely and angularly deformed in an elastic-plastic manner about the first and second flexural hinges within the insulation layer when a transverse shear load is applied to the anchor elements.
According to another aspect, an insulated composite structural wall panel includes: a first concrete layer; a second concrete layer; an insulation layer disposed between the first and second concrete layers; a shear tie comprising a longitudinal axis, a front surface having a flat profile, and a rear surface having a flat profile and parallel to the front surface, the shear tie formed of a fiber reinforced polymer material characterized by an elastic-plastic response to an applied shear load; a base portion defined by the shear tie and extending transversely to the longitudinal axis; a plurality of elongated anchor elements extending from the base portion parallel to the longitudinal axis, each anchor element having a rectilinear cross-section, a length, opposing lateral sides, a proximal end at the base portion, an opposite distal end, and an axial centerline, the anchor elements spaced laterally apart by elongated through-slots formed between the anchor elements that extend for the entire length of the anchor elements; each of the anchor elements having an upper portion embedded in the first concrete layer, a lower portion embedded in the second concrete layer, and an intermediate portion disposed in the insulation layer; wherein after a transverse shear load is applied to the first or second concrete layer, the intermediate portion of each anchor element within the insulation layer is deformed in a ductile elastic-plastic manner and laterally displaced such that the axial centerlines of the upper and lower portions are laterally offset from each other. In one implementation, the fiber reinforced polymer comprises unidirectional fibers in each anchor element running in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis along the length of each anchor element.
A method for sustaining an applied shear force in a composite structural panel is provided. The method includes: providing the composite structural panel including a first concrete layer, a second concrete layer, and an insulation layer disposed therebetween; providing a shear tie connecting the first concrete layer to the second concrete layer, the shear tie having a longitudinal axis, a base portion embedded in the first concrete layer, and a plurality of longitudinally elongated anchor elements connected to the base portion, each anchor element having an upper portion embedded in the second concrete layer, a lower portion defining a terminal distal end embedded in the first concrete layer, and an intermediate portion disposed in the insulation layer and oriented parallel to the longitudinal axis of the shear tie; the anchor elements of the shear tie constructed of a non-metallic material that exhibits an elastic-plastic response and failure mode to an applied shear load; laterally translating the first or second concrete layer in a first lateral direction transverse to the longitudinal axis of the shear tie, wherein a shear load is applied to the intermediate portion of each anchor element; deforming the intermediate portion of each anchor element in an elastic-plastic manner in response to translating the first or second concrete layer; and laterally deflecting the intermediate portion of each anchor element in the first lateral direction; wherein the intermediate portions of each anchor element in the insulation layer are oriented obliquely to the longitudinal axis of the shear tie. In one implementation, the shear tie is formed of a unidirectional fiber reinforced polymer matrix; the fibers in each anchor element running in a direction along the length of each anchor element.
Further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter.
The features of the exemplary embodiments will be described with reference to the following drawings where like elements are labeled similarly, and in which:
All drawings are schematic and not necessarily to scale. Parts given a reference numerical designation in one figure may be considered to be the same parts where they appear in other figures without a numerical designation for brevity unless specifically labeled with a different part number and/or described herein.
The features and benefits of the invention are illustrated and described herein by reference to exemplary embodiments. This description of exemplary embodiments is intended to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings, which are to be considered part of the entire written description. Accordingly, the disclosure expressly should not be limited to such exemplary embodiments illustrating some possible non-limiting combination of features that may exist alone or in other combinations of features.
In the description of embodiments disclosed herein, any reference to direction or orientation is merely intended for convenience of description and is not intended in any way to limit the scope of the present invention. Relative terms such as “lower,” “upper,” “horizontal,” “vertical,” “above,” “below,” “up,” “down,” “top” and “bottom” as well as derivative thereof (e.g., “horizontally,” “downwardly,” “upwardly,” etc.) should be construed to refer to the orientation as then described or as shown in the drawing under discussion. These relative terms are for convenience of description only and do not require that the apparatus be constructed or operated in a particular orientation. Terms such as “attached,” “affixed,” “connected,” “coupled,” “interconnected,” and similar refer to a relationship wherein structures are secured or attached to one another either directly or indirectly through intervening structures, as well as both movable or rigid attachments or relationships, unless expressly described otherwise.
In one embodiment, the front surface 22 of the shear tie 20 is parallel to the rear surface 23. Both surfaces 22, 23 may be substantially flat or planar; however, other surface profiles including non-planar are possible for one or both surfaces 22, 23.
Anchor elements 30 and 31 each have a longitudinal length L1 defining an axial CL coinciding with the geometric centerline along the length of each element. Base portion 21 has a lateral or transverse length L2 defining a transverse axis TA perpendicular to a longitudinal axis LA of the shear tie 20. The longitudinal axis LA is oriented parallel to the anchor centerlines CL of the anchor elements 30, 31 and passes through the geometric centerline of the shear tie. In the illustrated embodiment, shear tie 20 has a symmetrical shape about the longitudinal axis LA. In other possible configurations, the shear tie may have an asymmetric shape.
Exterior and interior anchor elements 30, 31 are longitudinally elongated and may have the same length L1 in one embodiment. Anchor elements 30, 31 are each connected to and arranged perpendicular to the common base portion 21 such that the anchor centerlines CL are oriented perpendicular to the transverse axis TA of the base portion. This configuration represents the undeformed pre-shear undeformed condition of the shear tie 20 shown in
With continuing reference to
The top proximal ends 36 of each exterior and interior anchor element 30, 31 terminate at the base portion 21. In a preferred embodiment, the bottom terminal distal ends 37 of each anchor element 30, 31 may terminate in a point 38 to facilitate insertion of the anchor elements into the unhardened concrete layer first cast and through insulation panel thereon during panel fabrication. The converging lateral sides 32 on each anchor element 30, 31 which form the point 38 are restricted to the distal portion of the anchor elements proximate to the distal end 37 in present embodiment (see, e.g.
Referring to
A plurality of longitudinally-extending open through-slots 40 are formed between the exterior and interior anchor elements 30, 31 as shown in
Shear ties 20 may be formed of a suitable thermally resistive material to minimize thermal bridging across the insulation panel between the interior and exterior wythes. In one non-limiting embodiment, the shear tie is made of glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) such as without limitation pultruded thermoset polyester resin. GFRP has high strength, excellent insulating properties, ease of fabrication, and economic production. Furthermore, GFRP has a similar thermal expansion coefficient and Poisson ratio to concrete mitigating additional stresses from temperature changes and in directions other than the loading surface. Ranges of pertinent nominal properties for pultruded thermoset GFRP are shown in the table below:
Typical Poisson's ration is 0.12 for this GFRP material. In some embodiments, carbon, basalt or aramid fiber may be used in the FRP matrix in lieu of glass, but has a higher associated cost. Young's modulus for this assortment of fibers usable in the fiber reinforced polymer matrix is approximately 240 GPa for carbon fibers, 90 GPa for basalt fibers, 150 Gpa for aramid fibers, and 80 GPa for glass fibers. It will be appreciated that other suitable thermally resistive non-metallic materials of sufficient strength which exhibit ductile and elastic-plastic behavior to an applied load (for reasons further explained below) may be used.
Insulation layer 53 has a thickness TI. Insulation layer 53 may be formed a suitable thermally resistive material, preferably having a self-supporting structure such as insulation board for ease of placement and fabrication of the structural panel 50. In other embodiments, the layer of insulation may be formed by a flowable and hardenable insulation material (e.g. foam insulation, etc.) which is formed and cast on top of the first structural layer 51. The invention is not limited by the type or manner of deposition of the insulation layer. An air gap can be used in place of a hardenable insulation material in other possible constructions. Preferably, the insulating material should be at least partially compressible and less dense than the shear tie material to allow the anchor elements 30, 31 of an installed shear tie 20 to deform within the insulation layer 53. In one non-limiting example, the insulation layer 53 may be made of an extruded polystyrene (XPS) board or panel. Other suitable insulating materials may be used, such as without limitation polystyrene foam, polyurethane foam, polypropylene foam, and others. Interfaces 56 and 57 are formed between the less rigid (softer) insulation layer 53 and the more rigid first and second structural layers 51, 52 respectively.
The composite structural panel 50 may have any dimensions. In one non-limiting example, structural layers 51 and 52 may have thicknesses TW1 and TW2 respectively of about 3 inches. The insulation layer 53 may have a thickness TI of about 2 inches. Other thicknesses of structural and insulating materials may be used. The panel 50 may have any appropriate width and length typically used for insulated composite structural wall panels formed of poured hardenable materials such as concrete.
With continuing reference to
Referring particularly to
The shear tie 20 preferably is further constructed and formed of a material suitable to exhibit a ductile behavior or mechanism (i.e. elastic-plastic response) under an applied shear load (see, e.g.
Accordingly, to provide the desired ductile behavior and deformation capacity, the shear tie in one non-limiting embodiment may be made of a GFRP material having a unidirectional glass fiber orientation running parallel to the anchor axes EA of the anchor elements 30, 31 (and longitudinal axis LA of the shear tie). The glass fibers therefore are arranged to extend along the length L1 of the anchor elements, rather than transversely. In alternative embodiments, unidirectional carbon or steel fibers may alternatively be used.
The shear tie 20 is constructed to form stable ductile or flexural hinges 59 at the location where the anchor elements 30, 31 are embedded into each concrete wythe (layer) 51, 52 (see, e.g.
It should be noted the ductile or flexural hinge, however, can be formed through a number of possible mechanisms. One approach is through the use of unidirectional fiber reinforced polymers such as GFRP, as already described herein. Other options for the formation of a stable ductile hinge mechanism include but are not limited to: the use of a high ductility resin with random fibers, or through the use of geometric variations in the anchor element section where it enters each concrete structural layer 51, 52.
It bears noting that in some embodiments, a single flexural hinge 59a or 59b may achieve the desired ductile deformation/deflection of the anchor elements 30, 31. An example is seen in the portion of the shear ties in
During fabrication, lifting hardware such as eyebolts are typically cast into the interior structural layer or wythe, which may be the top second and final structural layer 52 shown in
Finite element analysis was conducted to determine the stress contours in a shear tie 20 undergoing a single shear event (i.e. one structural layer 51 or 52 shifting or translating laterally).
A process for sustaining a shear load in a composite structural panel and the resultant flexural or ductile action of the shear tie 20 according to the present invention will now be described with reference to
The shear tie is formed of a material exhibiting an elastic-plastic behavior to a shear load, such as the unidirectional glass fiber reinforced polymer described herein in which the fibers run in a direction parallel to the length L1 of the anchor elements. The anchor elements 30, 31 in the insulation layer 53 are initially oriented parallel to the longitudinal axis LA of the shear tie 20 in the pre-shear undeformed condition shown in
Referring still to
In response, the intermediate portion 35 of each anchor element 30, 31 deflects or bends in the same first lateral direction LD1 in an elastic-plastic manner in response to moving the second structural layer 52. The graph shown in
During deformation of the shear tie 20 above, the portion of the anchor element axial centerline associated with the upper portions 34 of the anchor elements shifts laterally in the first lateral direction LD1 to establish a new post-deformation centerline CL′ position with respect to the original centerline CL represented by the lower portions 39 of the anchor elements embedded in the first structural layer 51 (which has not shifted laterally in this single shear example). The centerline CL′ of the anchor element upper portions 34 have transversely shifted and been displaced by a lateral distance D1. Centerline CL′ remains parallel to longitudinal axis LA of the shear tie 20 by virtue of the embedment of the upper portions in the second structural layer 52. The original centerline CL associated with the lower portions 39 of the anchor elements remains parallel to longitudinal axis LA as well.
The anchor element intermediate portions 35 and their respective lateral sides 32 have angularly deformed about the flexural hinges 59 resulting in their lateral displacement represented by distance D1. The intermediate portions 35 in the insulation layer 53 are now bent or slanted in the first lateral direction LD1 by an angle A2 with respect to the original centerline CL (parallel to longitudinal axis LA). This occurs as the upper section or half of the intermediate portion 35 of each anchor element 30, 31 (proximate to interface 56 between the second concrete layer 52 and the insulation layer 53) rotates clockwise about the top flexural hinge 59b (see rotational arrow). The lower section or half of the intermediate portion 35 of each anchor element 30, 31 in the insulation layer 53 (proximate to interface 57 between the first concrete layer 51 and the insulation layer) rotates clockwise about bottom flexural hinge 59a (see rotational arrow). The flexural hinges 59a, 59b act as pivot or rotation axes about which the anchor element intermediate portions 35 of the shear tie 20 angularly moves while undergoing deformation and deflection.
In the post-shear deformed condition or position shown in
While the foregoing description and drawings represent exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, it will be understood that various additions, modifications and substitutions may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope and range of equivalents of the accompanying claims. In particular, it will be clear to those skilled in the art that the present invention may be embodied in other forms, structures, arrangements, proportions, sizes, and with other elements, materials, and components, without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. In addition, numerous variations in the methods/processes described herein may be made within the scope of the present disclosure. One skilled in the art will further appreciate that the embodiments may be used with many modifications of structure, arrangement, proportions, sizes, materials, and components and otherwise, used in the practice of the disclosure, which are particularly adapted to specific environments and operative requirements without departing from the principles described herein. The presently disclosed embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive. The appended claims should be construed broadly, to include other variants and embodiments of the disclosure, which may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and range of equivalents.
The present application claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/022,397 filed Jul. 9, 2014, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under CMMI-1030812 awarded by The National Science Foundation (NSF). The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62022397 | Jul 2014 | US |