Structural performance and analytical modelling of hybrid pine-poplar glulam beams through efficient use of resources
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cruz, Carlos; Bravo Pareja, Rafael; Rescalvo Fernández, Francisco José; Fuentes-García, Yaiza; Lafuente Bolívar, Francisco JavierEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Resource efficiency Glulam beams Analytical formulation Pine Poplar Non-destructive testing
Fecha
2026-02-24Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Carlos Cruz et al. Structural performance and analytical modelling of hybrid pine-poplar glulam beams through efficient use of resources, Structures, Volume 86, 2026, 111464, ISSN 2352-0124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.istruc.2026.111464
Patrocinador
SMARTTIMBER PID2020.114386RB.I00; LIGHTTIMBER TED2021-130039B-I00; GLUCAR PID2023-148379OA-I00Resumen
This paper presents an experimental and analytical study on the structural performance and resource efficiency of hybrid glulam beams manufactured from pine (Pinus nigra) and poplar (Populus × euramericana, clone MC). In hybrid glulam beams, the modulus of elasticity is inherently non-uniform, varying both longitudinally and transversely because individual boards exhibit spatial stiffness variability along their length and across the cross-section. The main objective is to quantify the mechanical benefits of pine-poplar hybridization and to develop a predictive formulation for the beam modulus of elasticity accounting for these longitudinal and transverse stiffness distributions. Single-species and hybrid glulam beams were manufactured from pine and poplar boards and characterized by non-destructive testing and four-point bending tests according to UNE-EN 408. A new analytical formulation was developed to predict the beam modulus of elasticity from the spatial distribution of board elastic moduli, explicitly considering the strategic placement of the highest-stiffness boards in the outer lamellas, where bending stresses are maximum. The results show that this selection and placement increases the modulus of elasticity of hybrid glulam beams by 21 %, reaching values comparable to single-species pine beams, while also increasing flexural strength by 18 % and reducing beam density by 22 %. These findings are relevant for both researchers and the structural timber industry, enabling efficient, lightweight, and competitive hybrid glulam solutions for structural applications.





