TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR EXAMINES THE
STRUCTURAL BEHAVIOR OF LAMINATED GLASS WITH ALGOR
Modeling and analyzing laminated glass, such as plates used for
window glass in commercial buildings, presents several technical
challenges. According to Dr. W. Lynn Beason, an Associate Professor
of Civil Engineering at Texas A&M University in College Station,
Texas, "The main challenges are geometric nonlinearities, temperature-dependent
material and the great difference between the moduli of the layers."
As an engineering consultant, Beason used ALGOR finite element
analysis (FEA) software to study the structural behavior of laminated
glass for specific applications including glass in athletic complexes
and high-profile building applications.
Laminated glass is manufactured by bonding multiple layers of
glass together through the use of adhesive interlayers or a poured-in-place
resin. "The adhesive interlayer ensures safety," said Beason,
"because, if the external glass layers break, it adheres to the
glass fragments and prevents them from exiting the window framing
system." The interlayer material that is most often used is a
mixture of plasticizers and polyvinyl butyral (PVB) resin. The
most common laminated glass configuration involves two pieces
of glass of the same thickness and type that are bonded together
with a plasticized PVB interlayer.
"The structural characteristics of the plasticized PVB interlayer
depend on temperature," explained Beason, "which makes it stronger
when cold and weaker when hot." If the interlayer is hot, it is
soft and flexible and the shear transfer between the two glass
plates is limited. As the stiffness of the interlayer approaches
zero, the laminated glass plates behave as though they are independent
with no shear transfer. If the plasticized PVB interlayer is cold,
there is sufficient shear transfer between the glass plates so
that the behavior of the laminated glass approaches that of a
monolithic (uniform or made of a single material) glass plate
of the same overall thickness.
"Historically, it has been assumed that the strength of architectural
laminated glass with an interlayer is equal to 60 percent of the
strength of monolithic glass of equivalent thickness," said Beason,
who has led development of three American Society for Testing
and Materials (ASTM) standards for window glass. "Use of this
relationship assumes that there is limited shear transfer through
the interlayer." In recent years, research funded by PVB manufacturers
has redefined the historic laminated glass strength relationship
such that the strength factor has been increased to 0.75 in most
building codes throughout the United States. Some PVB researchers
recommend that the structural behavior of laminated glass is equivalent
to the structural behavior of monolithic glass for most common
applications and therefore a laminated glass strength factor of
1.0 should be adopted.
"Implementation of this monolithic equivalency assumption would
allow one-to-one replacement of existing monolithic glass with
laminated glass without altering existing window framing details,"
said Beason. "However, if the monolithic equivalency model is
not valid, its implementation would result in the unconservative
design and use of laminated glass, which could lead to failure
of the glass at the design load."
Beason, who has more than 25 years of experience relating to
the design of window glass, modeled and analyzed laminated and
monolithic glass in ALGOR FEA software to compare them. "A few
years ago, I used other FEA packages, namely Ansys and Abaqus,
on a supercomputer to analyze these kinds of models because of
the extensive calculations required for geometric nonlinearities.
Now, I can get the same accuracy using ALGOR on a PC. Plus, its
overall ease-of-use enables me to set up and analyze a model more
quickly."
To compare the two glass types, Beason created two models of
a 72 x 72 x 1/2 in. glass plate, one laminated and the other monolithic.
The laminated glass model consisted of two glass layers with a
PVB interlayer and the monolithic glass model was one solid piece
of glass. Both models used 8-node brick elements and were subjected
to a negative pressure load of 0.5 psi, which simulated a wind
load. Constraints were defined to represent continuous lateral
support of all four edges, which assumed the edges of the glass
were simply supported and free to slip in plane.
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Shown here are two quarter-symmetry ALGOR finite
element models of a 72 x 72 x 1/2 in. plate of glass with
four-sided support. Tensile stress ( yy) contours from a wind pressure
loading in the 朲 direction illustrate that maximum stress
is greater for laminated glass (left) than monolithic
glass (right). Plus, the maximum stresses occur at different
points on the plate surfaces, which are shown in the inset
close-up views. The insets reveal that, due to shear deformations
experienced by the interlayer, the stress distribution
through the thickness of the laminated plate is very different
from that of the monolithic plate. |
Custom material properties were defined for the glass and PVB
interlayer at a temperature of 120?/font>
F including mass density, modulus of elasticity, Poisson's ratio
and shear modulus of elasticity. The material properties were
obtained from a study of laminated glass beams with architectural-grade
plasticized PVB interlayers, which was conducted in association
with the specification of laminated glass for use in the Sydney
Opera House in Australia (Hooper, 1973).
Beason then performed Mechanical Event Simulation with nonlinear
materials to include the effects of large deflection and large
strain. The validity of the finite element modeling procedure
was established by comparing finite element results with published
theoretical and experimental results (Vallabhan, et al, 1993),
which matched.
"The maximum principal stress revealed in the ALGOR finite element
model for the laminated glass plate is about 25 percent greater
than for the monolithic glass plate," said Beason. "The reason
this happens is that plane sections do not remain plane on the
laminated glass because of the mismatch in the moduli of elasticity
between the glass and the interlayer."
Beason explained, "The structural behavior of laminated glass
is a function of the interaction of the glass plates and the plasticized
PVB interlayer. The stiffness of the plasticized PVB interlayer
is many orders of magnitude less than that of glass. As a result,
plane sections through the thickness of laminated glass before
loading do not necessarily remain plane after loading due to differences
in deformation between the layers."
According to Beason, the FEA results suggest the general use
of a monolithic equivalency for the design of architectural-grade
laminated glass is not warranted. Rather, the findings concluded
that use of a monolithic equivalency could result in poor estimates
of both stresses and deflections for some common laminated glass
situations, which might lead to glass breakage.
"If a consensus can be reached regarding an appropriate design
temperature," said Beason, "results from finite element analyses
can be combined with glass failure prediction formulations to
develop rational design criteria for architectural-grade laminated
glass in general use. In the interim, it is recommended that the
laminated glass strength factor not be increased above 0.75 for
architectural-grade laminated glass."
According to Beason, "FEA tools like ALGOR can be used quite
effectively to complement traditional hand calculation methods
for validating proposed changes to standards and codes."
W. Lynn Beason earned a Ph.D. at Texas Tech University. He frequently
serves as a consultant on matters relating to the structural behavior
of window glass.
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