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University of Nottingham research into a composite design for steel beams and floor slabs has resulted in environmental and economic benefits and an important change in the construction industry. The work has reduced the weight of beams and the overall tonnage of buildings, enabled easier installation and improved structural strength. More than 40 projects, with a total combined floor area in excess of 380,000m2, have used the technology since 2008, and the method's market share has been estimated at up to 60%. The breakthrough has facilitated partnerships between steel frame designers and precast flooring manufacturers, with the value to the latter alone put at more than £5M.
The key impact is in the definition of best practice for the design of joints, components and structures comprised of glass fibre reinforced polymers (GFRP, also known as fibreglass). The primary beneficiaries are (i) professional civil and structural engineering designers of GFRP structures; (ii) pultruders and composites fabricators due to continually expanding use of GFRPs in construction; and (iii) the general public through the provision of sustainable structures.
In particular, Lancaster's research on pultruded GFRP materials and structures has contributed to the EUROCOMP Design Code and Handbook (1996), the world's first limit state design code for GFRP structures. This code has influenced GFRP structural design globally ever since, both pre and post-2008. Additionally, post-2008, EUROCOMP has triggered and influenced development of new European and Japanese design codes, in turn impacting designers, fabricators and the public in those geographical regions. Lancaster's research has influenced the US Load and Resistance Factor (LRFD) Prestandard (2010) and ASCE's Manual No.102 on bolted and bonded joints (2011) two codes and guidelines that will accelerate the US's application of composites in construction.
Thus, the use of Lancaster's research in these codes and guidelines has supported the construction of fibreglass-based civil structures across the globe as well as the delivery of individuals with the analysis and design skills needed by the composites industry.
Some of the most significant and widely used products for steel framed buildings in the global construction market today have been developed by the Structural & Geotechnical Engineering Research Centre at City University London. Our work in this field has permitted a saving of between 25 and 30% in the amount of steel needed for such buildings, making them now on average 9% cheaper than their concrete equivalents. Our research data from this work is now incorporated into at least six Design Guides and two significant industry software suites, published by the Steel Construction Institute (SCI) [text removed for publication]. Steel frame build times have been reduced by up to 13% and the resulting buildings can be 20-50% more energy efficient, helping the industry move towards its `Target Zero' carbon goals.
The dynamic response of steel members and floor systems has been a key concern in the industry over the last decade. The work undertaken at City has been effective in helping bring new products to market and in improving the application of structural mechanics to real design situations. It has also made a significant contribution to the increasing success of the steel industry in the UK commercial building market.
Research within the Building Research Establishment's sponsored Centre for Innovative Construction Materials (CICM) at the University of Bath has allowed the life of concrete structures to be extended through developing (a) proper methods for assessing existing capacity and (b) the means to increase capacity where necessary. This has prevented buildings and bridges (managed, for example, by large asset owners such as the Highways Agency and Network Rail) from being condemned as unfit for purpose, resulting in vast savings in reconstruction costs and preventing disruption to infrastructure users. The work has led to the researchers being commissioned to write guidance documents that are routinely used by infrastructure owners and consulting engineers worldwide. Over the course of the last eight years this has resulted in several £millions of savings to infrastructure owners and the UK economy.
ERPE research, since 2001, into the application of Fibre Reinforced Polymer (FRP) composites for strengthening existing civil engineering structures continues to impact design guidelines for preserving and updating the worldwide ageing infrastructure. The lifetime extension of existing infrastructure and buildings is a priority: the UK Government plans to invest up to £250bn over 10 years to return UK infrastructure to `world class' performance. 75% of developed world infrastructure investment covers retrofitting and repair rather than new-build. FRP strengthening is now the method of choice for seismic retrofit, capacity enhancement, structural repair and rehabilitation of concrete and masonry structures.
ERPE research to enhance strength and structural integrity has been used in the development of, or been incorporated into, at least 12 design guides codes and standards worldwide in at least 5 countries including Australia, Canada, China etc.
For aerospace vehicles, the development of new materials and structural configurations are key tools in the relentless drive to reduce weight and increase performance (in terms of, for example, speed and flight characteristics). The economic drivers are clear — it is widely recognised that it is worth approximately $10k to save one pound of weight in a spacecraft per launch and $500 per pound for an aircraft over its lifetime. The environmental drivers (ACARE 2050) are also clear — reduced aircraft weight leads to lower fuel burn and, in turn, to lower CO2 and NOx emissions. With such high cost-to-weight ratios, there is intense industrial interest in the development of new structural configurations/concepts and enhanced structural models that allow better use of existing or new materials. Analytical structural mechanics models of novel anisotropic structures, developed at the University's Advanced Composites Centre for Innovation and Science (ACCIS), are now used in the industrial design of aircraft and spacecraft. Based on this research, a new, unique anisotropic composite blade, designed to meet an Urgent Operational Requirement for the MoD, is now flying on AgustaWestland EH101 helicopters that are deployed in Theatre. In addition, the new modelling tools and techniques have been adopted by Airbus, AgustaWestland, Cassidian and NASA and incorporated into LUSAS's finite element analysis software. These tools have, for example, been used to inform Airbus's decision to use a largely aluminium wing design rather than a hybrid CFRP/aluminium wing for the A380.
Dr Richard Brooks and his team at the University of Nottingham have been investigating the high strain rate behaviour of composite materials since 2003. This has led to the development of two products that are being installed in streets in the UK and Ireland by East Midlands SME Frangible Safety Posts Ltd. The direct benefits to the company have been: the installation of 900 products in the UK and Ireland; saving of £17k capital cost and 2 months in terms of time to market per product developed and; raising of £1.8M investment to bring the products to market At least one life has already been saved in the Shetland Islands as a direct consequence of the product behaving in the way it was designed to.
Following the North Sea Piper Alpha oil rig accident in 1988 and subsequent Cullen inquiry, new and safer maintenance procedures were introduced. One of the most significant changes was the restriction in the use of welding repairs (hot work) in the maintenance of plant and pipework due to the risk of fire and explosion. Research at Newcastle provided a novel engineering model that formed the basis for implementation of a new repair technology. This used fibre reinforced polymer wraps to restore the integrity of pipes without `hot work' or any interruption of production, thus minimising operational costs and increasing worker safety. This new technology has now become industry standard with new ISO and ASME standards for pipeline repair established as mandatory standards in 2006 and 2008 respectively (ISO/TS 24817 — Composite repairs for pipework; and ASME PCC-2, Repair of pressure vessels and piping). The period 2008-2013 has seen considerable expansion, worldwide, of an industry offering materials and support services to enable composite repairs to be designed and carried out.
National and International design codes are the key vehicles for enabling structural engineering research to impact on practice. Recent years have seen substantial advancements in such codes for stainless steel structures, to which Imperial has made outstanding contributions [A-E]. Imperial research has led directly to improved structural design provisions, enabling more efficient structures, leading to cost savings [G], further promotion of the use of stainless steel in construction [A,H,I] and a reduction in the use of construction resources. The impact and reach of Imperial's research has not only been throughout the industry (producers [H], code writers [A] and practitioners [G,I]) but also global, with widespread influence on UK, European, North American and Asian practice [A].
£80m has been saved since 2008 by London Underground (LU) and yet more by bridge owners in the UK as a direct result of using the Arching Action (AA) enhancements in strength predicted by our research. The associated disruption would have resulted in enormous congestion, losses economically of £ billions and negative social impact. Multi-million $ savings have also accrued in North America from the use of corrosion free deck bridges, which have minimum maintenance, as has our innovative flexible concrete arch (patented 2004) which has been used for over 40 FlexiArch bridges (£15m in contracts) since 2008.