Advancements in Strengthening Thin-Walled Steel Structures
Cold-formed steel lipped angle columns play a vital role in modern lightweight construction, from modular housing frames to transmission towers and roof trusses. These open thin-walled sections offer advantages in ease of fabrication and material efficiency but face significant challenges under axial compression due to their susceptibility to various buckling modes. A new experimental study published in the journal Structures explores how carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) wrapping can substantially improve their performance.
The research, titled Structural performance of CFRP-strengthened cold-formed steel lipped angle columns: An experimental study, was conducted by Vivek K. S., Mohammad Adil Dar, and Sreedhar Babu T. It provides detailed insights into practical strengthening techniques that could influence design practices in civil and structural engineering. The full paper is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S235201242601283X.
Understanding Cold-Formed Steel and Its Structural Vulnerabilities
Cold-formed steel (CFS) refers to steel sections shaped at room temperature through processes like roll-forming or press-braking, resulting in thin-walled profiles with high strength-to-weight ratios. Lipped angle sections, featuring equal legs with inward lips, are mono-symmetric and commonly employed where weight reduction is critical. However, their geometry leads to low torsional rigidity and a mismatch between the centroid and shear centre, promoting torsional-flexural buckling (TFB), where twisting couples with bending about the major axis. Shorter members often fail via TFB, while longer ones may experience minor-axis flexural buckling (FB), sometimes interacting with local buckling in slender plate elements.
Engineers must account for these instabilities in design codes, yet real-world factors such as corrosion, overloading, or construction tolerances can necessitate retrofitting. Traditional methods like welding additional steel plates add weight and require extensive site work, prompting interest in advanced composite materials.
The Role of Carbon Fibre Reinforced Polymer in Structural Retrofitting
Carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) consists of carbon fibres embedded in a polymer matrix, delivering exceptional tensile strength, stiffness, and corrosion resistance at a fraction of steel's weight. When bonded externally to steel members, CFRP acts as confinement, delaying buckling and enhancing load-carrying capacity. Fibre orientation matters greatly: uni-directional (UD) sheets with fibres aligned along the member axis (0°) provide superior axial reinforcement, while bi-directional (BD) weaves offer balanced properties in multiple directions.
Previous investigations on channels and plain angles demonstrated meaningful gains in capacity and stiffness. This latest work extends those findings specifically to lipped angles, addressing a noted gap in the literature for these particular sections.
Experimental Design and Testing Methodology
The study involved 44 fixed-end specimens fabricated from press-braked CFS lipped angles with nominal dimensions of 70 mm × 70 mm × 15 mm lips and thicknesses of 1.5 mm or 2.0 mm. Column lengths tested were 500 mm (short) and 1000 mm (intermediate). Bare steel controls were compared against strengthened versions using single-layer externally bonded CFRP in UD and BD configurations applied as surface wrapping.
An innovative variant combined cardboard in-fill inside the angle with external CFRP confinement to create a more closed-section behaviour. All specimens underwent monotonic axial compression testing, with measurements focused on ultimate load, axial stiffness, shortening behaviour, and failure modes. Nominal yield capacities were calculated as approximately 51 kN for 1.5 mm sections and 70 kN for 2.0 mm sections based on material properties.
Photo by Danny De Vylder on Unsplash
Key Findings on Strength and Stiffness Improvements
Results demonstrated consistent benefits from CFRP application. For 500 mm specimens, maximum strength increases reached 31.61% for 1.5 mm thick sections and 27.88% for 2.0 mm sections. Corresponding gains for 1000 mm specimens were 24.47% and 27.05%. Axial stiffness also improved noticeably due to enhanced confinement.
The UD-0° configuration, with fibres running parallel to the column axis, delivered the highest efficiency among skin-strengthening schemes. Incorporating cardboard in-fill alongside this CFRP orientation proved most effective overall, restraining torsional-flexural instability and yielding the largest enhancements in both strength and stiffness. Most specimens failed primarily through torsional-flexural buckling, often coupled with local or minor-axis flexural buckling, except for the in-filled configurations that better controlled these modes.
Implications for Engineering Practice and Lightweight Construction
These experimental outcomes suggest viable, low-weight retrofitting strategies for existing CFS structures in applications ranging from industrial buildings to infrastructure supports. The corrosion-resistant nature of CFRP adds long-term durability benefits, particularly in exposed environments. Practicing engineers working on rehabilitation projects may find the fibre-orientation guidance and in-fill concept directly applicable when optimising capacity without major section enlargement.
Broader adoption could support sustainable construction goals by extending service life of lightweight steel systems rather than full replacement. The study highlights how targeted composite interventions address specific instability mechanisms prevalent in open thin-walled sections.
Connections to Broader Research in Composite Materials and Steel Structures
This investigation builds on earlier work by the same research team on plain angle columns and lipped channels, where similar CFRP schemes showed promise but left torsional issues partially unresolved. The addition of in-fill represents an evolution toward hybrid solutions that transform open sections into more stable closed ones.
Related studies on hot-rolled sections and hollow profiles have reported capacity gains from 15% to over 100% depending on layering and orientation, underscoring CFRP's versatility across steel types. The current focus on lipped angles fills an important niche given their widespread use in modular and prefabricated systems.
Future Directions and Research Opportunities in Structural Engineering
While the experiments provide robust data on short-to-intermediate lengths and specific thicknesses, expanded testing on longer slenderness ratios, different end conditions, and cyclic loading would further inform seismic or fatigue applications. Analytical modelling and finite element validation could complement the experimental database to develop design guidelines or updates to direct strength method provisions.
Opportunities exist for academic researchers and graduate students to explore cost optimisation, alternative infill materials, or multi-layer CFRP arrangements. Industry collaborations could accelerate translation into practical codes or proprietary strengthening systems.
Relevance to Academic and Professional Development in Civil Engineering
Publications like this contribute to the evolving body of knowledge that shapes curricula in structural mechanics, materials science, and construction technology. Faculty members and postdoctoral researchers in civil engineering departments may incorporate these findings into courses on advanced composites or thin-walled structures. PhD candidates seeking impactful dissertation topics could build upon the identified gaps, such as long-term durability under environmental exposure or optimisation for specific regional building practices.
The emphasis on experimental rigour and practical outcomes aligns with demands for applied research that bridges laboratory insights and field implementation.
Outlook for Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure
As global construction trends favour lightweight, prefabricated solutions, effective strengthening techniques become increasingly valuable for maintaining safety margins in aging or overloaded assets. CFRP-enhanced CFS members offer a pathway to higher performance with minimal added mass, supporting goals of resource efficiency and reduced embodied carbon through extended asset life.
Stakeholders including structural consultants, fabricators, and infrastructure owners stand to benefit from evidence-based approaches demonstrated in controlled testing environments. Continued interdisciplinary work between materials scientists, structural engineers, and industry partners will likely refine these methods further.
