| Brand Name: | KXD |
| Model Number: | KXD-01 |
| MOQ: | 500 sqm |
| Price: | USD 68-100 per sqm |
| Delivery Time: | 25 days |
| Payment Terms: | L/C,T/T |
| Parameter | Description | Unit | Example Values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steel Grade | Designation of the steel type | - | Q235, Q345, ASTM A36 |
| Yield Strength | Stress at which the steel begins to deform plastically | MPa | 235 for Q235, 345 for Q345 |
| Ultimate Tensile Strength | Maximum stress the steel can withstand before failure | MPa | 370 - 500 for Q235, 470 - 630 for Q345 |
| Elastic Modulus | Measure of the steel's stiffness in the elastic range | GPa | 206 for carbon steel |
| Poisson's Ratio | Ratio of lateral strain to axial strain under uniaxial stress | - | 0.3 for steel |
| Density | Mass per unit volume of the steel | kg/m³ | 7850 for carbon steel |
| Cross - Section Shape | Shape of the steel member cross - section | - | I - beam, H - beam, channel, angle |
| Cross - Section Dimensions | Width, height, thickness, etc. of the cross - section | mm | For an I - beam: height = 300 mm, width = 150 mm, flange thickness = 10 mm, web thickness = 8 mm |
| Moment of Inertia | Geometric property related to the cross - section's resistance to bending | Mm4 | Varies depending on cross - section shape and dimensions |
| Section Modulus | Geometric property related to the cross - section's resistance to bending stress | mm³ | Varies depending on cross - section shape and dimensions |
| Torsional Constant | Property related to the cross - section's resistance to torsion | Mm4 | Varies depending on cross - section shape and dimensions |
| Weld Strength | Strength of the welded joint, related to the welding process and materials | MPa | Depends on welding method, electrode type, etc. |
| Bolt Strength | Strength of bolts used for connections, specified by bolt grade | MPa | Grade 8.8 bolts have a minimum tensile strength of 800 MPa |
Steel Structure buildings are the largest sector of the global industrial construction market, representing upwards of 70% of total activity. These buildings are typically used for workshops, factories, industrial and distribution warehouses and retail and leisure. Sizes vary from small workshops of just a few hundred square meters up to massive distribution warehouses covering over one hundred thousand square meters.
Contribute to huge improvements in quality, cost and delivery performance of our design, fabrication as well as engineering ability, these improvements have been achieved through increasingly efficient use of the portal frame, improved project planning, and active supply chain management.
Modern industrial steel structure buildings taking advantage of the latest advances in automated fabrication and construction techniques can provide economic solutions to the demands of safety, rapid construction, aesthetics, shallow construction depth, minimal maintenance and flexibility in future use. Steel also scores well on all the sustainability measures and offers a broad range of benefits addressing the economic, environmental, and social priorities of the 'triple bottom line' of sustainability.
At the concept design stage of single or multi-storey industrial buildings, the following overall design requirements shall be taken into consideration:
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