Analyzing the Sample Geometry Effect on Mechanical Performance of Drilled GFRP Connections

Materials (Basel). 2022 Apr 15;15(8):2901. doi: 10.3390/ma15082901.

Abstract

A considerable effort to understand the bolted joints' mechanical behavior in pultruded profiles has existed in the literature over the past decades. However, most investigations focused on the single-bolt connections, and only a few works considered single-lap joints. This paper investigates the mechanical performance of a single-lap connection of pultruded glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) plates owning to the experimental data deficit in the literature. Tensile tests of specimens with different geometries generate a database comprising 80 single-bolt joints. The shear-out failure was predominant for the considered GFRP pultruded plates, with the end length mainly affecting the load-bearing capacity. Hart-Smith's theoretical model overestimated the ultimate resistance of all considered joints-the exceptionally low efficiency of the GFRP composite points out the necessity of additional means for strengthening the drilled connections. Additionally, finite element (FE) software Abaqus simulated the bolted joints; this study employs the user-defined subroutine experimentally verified in the literature. In the considered examples, the ultimate resistance prediction error decreased from 25.7% to 2.9% with increasing the plate thickness (from 4 mm to 8 mm) and width (from 25 mm to 35 mm), which proves the reasonable adequacy of the simplified FE model and makes it a valuable reference for further bolted joints' development.

Keywords: bolted connection; failure; fiber-reinforced polymer; finite element analysis; glass fibers; pultrusion; tensile tests.