The present invention relates to a coupling device for structural members to transfer load from one member to another. The coupling device comprises a coupling case that contains connecting slots in which the members to be connected are placed and wedges that are inserted in the space between the coupling case and the connected members. The coupling device of the present invention can connect structural members using the wedging action under external forces. To prevent the members from slipping out of the coupling case, the surface of the wedge that touches the connected member is treated to have a higher coefficient of friction than the surface that touches the coupling case.
Bolt connection has been widely used as the means of structural connection in construction fields. As illustrated in
However, bolt connection requires a large number of holes to be drilled in the connected members and the splice plates, and this causes problems such as a notch or stress concentration around the holes.
Furthermore, since the holes are drilled larger than the bolt diameter to meet the dimensional tolerance during erection, slip of the connection may occur and result in undesirable performance when the joint is subjected to repeated reversed load as shown in
To improve the performance of bolt connection, Korean Laid-open Pat. No. 1999-76051 (Application No. 10-1998-10689) has disclosed a connecting technique in which friction rings (16) are placed between the connected member (10) and the splice plates (12) to increase the frictional force (See
The proposed methods may increase the frictional force but can not solve the problems of bolted connection. Moreover, friction rings make a gap between the connected member and the splice plates, which may impair the integrity of the joint. Mechanically processing the surfaces to have serrations may increase the fabrication costs.
It is the objective of the present invention to provide an economical coupling device for structural connections that is easy to install and has a good structural performance.
The coupling device of the present invention can solve the problems of the bolt connection by reducing or excluding the use of bolts using wedging action.
The coupling device of the present invention has characteristics described hereinafter.
The coupling device comprises a coupling case that contains connecting slots in which the members to be connected are placed and wedges that are inserted into the space between the coupling case and the connected members.
In addition, the surface of said wedge which touches said member is treated to have a higher coefficient of friction than the surface which touches said coupling case.
The sectional shape of said wedge could be selected among triangle, trapezoid, and pentagon to conform in shape to the space between said coupling case and said members.
Said wedge has a feature that the angle (θ) between the slope side and the bottom side is ranged from 1° to
(where μ is a coefficient of friction between said wedge and said coupling case, and μ′ is a coefficient of friction between said wedge and said members).
The bottom surface of said wedge has a feature that it is treated to increase the coefficient of friction. Particularly, said bottom surface may be processed mechanically to have serrations of various shapes.
Contrary, the slope surface of said wedge has a feature that it is treated to reduce the coefficient of friction. Precisely, said slope surface may be finished mechanically and/or coated with a lubricant.
If said coupling case is a separate-type, it has a feature that the two parts are joined using bolts or using male piece having projection part (herein after male piece) and female piece having furrow part (herein after female piece). In the latter case, a male piece slips into a female guide (the male and female pieces can be tapered to help installation).
As depicted in
The coupling device of the present invention will be clearly described in reference to the following drawings hereinafter. However, these drawings are for illustration purpose, and modification and improvement can be made in the scope of the present invention.
In
Force equilibrium along the slope side of the wedge requires
where
is the component of force P′ in the slope direction; Psinθ is the component of force P in the slope direction;
is the frictional force along the slope surface.
Solving Equation (1) for P′ gives
In order to prevent the connected member from slipping out of the coupling case, the frictional resistance acting on the contact area between the bottom surface of the wedge (304) and the connected member (10) is required to exceed the external load. This requirement may be written as P′<2Pμ′.
Using Equation (2), this requirement becomes
Solving Equation (3) for θ gives
Consequently, the angle θ is calculated by substituting μ and μ′ values into the equation (4) and then the shape of the wedge (10) is determined to have a lower value than the calculated θ considering the safety factor for the structure.
Namely, when external forces such as tension, compression and shearing force are acted on the member (10), as the external force increases, the vertical force that is induced to the member (10) by the wedge (30) increases due to the difference between the coefficient of friction μ between the slope side (302) of the wedge (30) and the coupling case (20) and μ′ between the bottom side (304) of the wedge (30) and the member (10). As a result, the frictional force between the member (10) and the wedge (30) depends on the maximum capacity of said coupling case (20) to resist the vertical force.
The size and the shape of the wedge (30) is determined depending on the value of θ. As the difference in the values of the friction coefficients μ and μ′ increases, the larger value of the angle θ can be used. As the value of θ increases, the force that the coupling case has to resist in vertical direction reduces, which helps to reduce the size of the coupling case. This is why the μ value of the slope surface (302) of the wedge (30) needs to be reduced by finishing mechanically or coating with lubricants. At the same time, the μ′ value needs to be increased by mechanically processing the bottom surface (304) of the wedge (30) to have serrations of various shapes. The examples of the serrations are demonstrated in
In the specification of the present invention, the term “member (10)” is used to represent the members to be connected such as structural steel H-shaped sections. However, It can be made of any material such as wood, plastic, and stone. Likewise, the coupling case (20) and the wedge (30) can be made of steel preferably, but also of any material such as wood, plastic, stone, and so on.
The term “connecting slot (22)” designates the slots made in the coupling case (20) where the member (10) and the wedge (30) are placed for connection. The term “connecting slot (22)” is described and indicated hereafter without the symbol of the figure
As demonstrated in
The wedges (30) are made to have a proper angle between the slope side and the bottom side, which is determined from Equation (4). In the assembled state, the members (10) do not slip out of the coupling case (20) under external force P acting in the direction shown in the figure due to the wedging action of the wedge (30). As the external force increases, the higher clamping force is induced in the vertical direction and the frictional force increases proportionally.
As demonstrated in
The wedges (30) are made to have a proper angle between the slope side and the bottom side, which is determined from Equation (4). In the assembled state, the members (10) do not slip out of the coupling case (20) under external force P acting in the direction shown in the figure due to the wedging action of the wedge (30). As the external force increases, the higher clamping force is induced in the vertical direction and the frictional force increases proportionally.
As illustrated in
As described in
The wedge of No. 38 can be used in the case when the coupling device is designed to transfer external force applied monotonically. The wedge of No. 39 has a slope in the axial direction of the wedge in order to help installation.
Wedges of a pentagon shape are used to illustrate the present invention. However, the scope of the present invention is not limited to this shape.
Although it is desirable to conform the slope of the connecting slot to that of the wedge (30), different shape can be used depending on conditions.
As described in
10: member
20: coupling case
30: wedge
306: projection
308: serration
40: elastic clipping plate
Practical and presently preferred embodiments of the present invention are illustrative as shown below.
However, it will be appreciated that those skilled in the art, on consideration of this disclosure, may make modifications and improvements within the scope of the present invention.
<Preferred Embodiment 1>
Other types of coupling cases (20) illustrated in
<Preferred Embodiment 2>
In this figure, the coupling case (20) has three connecting slots. Two connecting slots are used for one member (vertical member in the figure) to resist two external forces acting in two directions. One connecting slot is used for the other member (horizontal member in the figure) to resist external force in one direction.
<Preferred Embodiment 3>
<Preferred Embodiment 4>
<Preferred Embodiment 5>
As shown in the figure, the width and the thickness of two members are different. Two members of different sizes can be connected by adjusting the length and/or the height of the connecting slots. The coupling device of the present invention can be used to improve the seismic performance of structural frame during severe earthquake by moving the plastic hinge away from the beam-to-column welds.
The coupling device of the present invention can solve the problems of bolt connections such as a notch and stress concentration around the holes. Besides, the coupling device of the present invention can reduce the construction time and the labor costs greatly compared with friction-type bolt connection.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conceptions and specific embodiments disclosed in the foregoing description may be readily utilized as a basis for modification or design of other embodiments to carry out the same purposes of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that such equivalent embodiments do not depart from the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2000-32359 | Jun 2000 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/KR01/00572 | 4/4/2001 | WO | 00 | 12/4/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO01/96752 | 12/20/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2562483 | Bender | Jul 1951 | A |
2627431 | Sechrist | Feb 1953 | A |
3685866 | Patenaude | Aug 1972 | A |
3734549 | Loov | May 1973 | A |
3938297 | Sato et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
5061111 | Hosokawa | Oct 1991 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030129026 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |