This study presents a comprehensive numerical investigation into the combined bending–shear behaviour of hollow-flanged cold-formed steel (HFCFS) beams filled with lightweight concrete (LWC). Although previous research has independently examined the pure bending and pure shear responses of these composite members, their structural performance under simultaneous bending and shear remains unexplored. In this work, advanced three-dimensional finite element (FE) models were developed in ABAQUS to simulate the nonlinear behaviour of LWC-filled HFCFS beams subjected to various shear-span ratios. The modelling approach was validated using published experimental data and extended through a systematic parametric study that considered three beam geometries, two steel yield strengths (350 MPa and 450 MPa), two lightweight-concrete strengths (30 MPa and 50 MPa), and aspect ratios ranging from 1.5 to 3.5. The results demonstrated a clear progression of governing failure modes, from web shear buckling at low aspect ratios to combined shear–flexure interaction at intermediate spans and flexural-dominated failure at larger spans. Normalised shear and bending demand–capacity ratios (V/Vu and M/Mu) were used to identify the dominant limit state, revealing a predictable transition from shear-controlled to flexure-controlled behaviour. The findings enhance the understanding of composite thin-walled steel–concrete systems under combined actions and highlight the need for dedicated design rules for CF-HFCFS beams operating within the bending–shear interaction domain.
Sifan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.