Comparison of stiffness properties of common coated fabrics
Author(s): |
Jörg Uhlemann
Natalie Stranghöner Klaus Saxe |
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Steel Construction, December 2015, n. 4, v. 8 |
Page(s): | 222-229 |
DOI: | 10.1002/stco.201510030 |
Abstract: |
Woven coated fabrics commonly used for tensile membrane structures are PVC-coated polyester fabrics and PTFE-coated glass-fibre fabrics. Regarding the stiffness of these materials, membrane structure experts frequently point out that glass/PTFE fabrics are "stiffer" than PES/PVC fabrics. However, this statement cannot be verified by existing literature, although numerous publications deal with the stress-strain behaviour of coated woven fabrics. Available stress-strain test data are almost impossible to compare, mainly because published stress-strain data for glass/PTFE refer to materials with higher strengths than the published test data for PES/PVC materials. The aim of the present paper is to compare the stiffness properties of PES/PVC and glass/PTFE fabrics with identical tensile strength properties by means of theoretical investigations and uniaxial tensile tests. The results demonstrate that glass-fibre fabric indeed exhibits a higher tensile stiffness than comparable polyester fabric for typical working stress ranges between the prestress level and the maximum design strength. However, for lower stress ranges up to approximately three-quarters of the design strength, the tensile stiffness of glass-fibre fabrics is identical with or even lower than that of comparable polyester fabric. The transverse strain is considerably higher for the glass-fibre fabric throughout. |
Keywords: |
Poisson's ratio Young's modulus tensile membrane structures architectural fabric synthetic fibres stiffness properties uniaxial tensile tests
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Available from: | Refer to publisher |
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data sheet - Reference-ID
10072566 - Published on:
30/11/2015 - Last updated on:
30/11/2015