1996
DOI: 10.1061/(asce)0733-9445(1996)122:4(399)
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High-Temperature Properties of Stainless Steel for Building Structures

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Cited by 42 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The material chosen was ASTM 304 stainless steel. Figure 14 compares the present elastic modulus measurements with the measurements of Sakumoto et al [15]. Good agreement can be observed at both room temperature and 400°C.…”
Section: Validationsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…The material chosen was ASTM 304 stainless steel. Figure 14 compares the present elastic modulus measurements with the measurements of Sakumoto et al [15]. Good agreement can be observed at both room temperature and 400°C.…”
Section: Validationsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…An additional objective was to extend the range of grades covered by current structural design guidance, while also rationalising the number of strength reduction factors provided to designers by grouping grades that exhibit similar characteristics. and Ala-Outinen and Oksanen [3], together with those presented by Sakumoto [20], allow a direct comparison between the results obtained for stainless steel from these two testing techniques. With reference to the 0.2% proof strength, the authors of both of the above studies indeed observed lower reduction factors from anisothermal tests, but at higher strains, the differences were small.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The cold-formed material was extracted from cold-rolled structural hollow sections, and would therefore have undergone some degree of cold-work during production [19]. Sakumoto et al [20] [32]. It should be emphasised that cold-worked stainless steel sheet material is supplied to specified minimum standard values, whereas during cold-forming of sections, an unspecified level of cold-work is experienced, depending primarily on the forming route and section geometry.…”
Section: Materials Tests At Elevated Temperatures For Stainless Steelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the macroscopicmodulus obtainedbyaresonance technique is shown for comparison. [28] Resonance techniques are expected to give as lightly lower modulus than that obtained from (effectively) static loading, sincethe former is an adiabatic measure of stiffnessw hile the latter is isothermal ( e.g. , Reference 29).…”
Section: Elastic Deformationmentioning
confidence: 99%