cyrosmith85
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 10, 2015
- 7
Hi,
This is my first post.
First of all I would like to thank you all for the help you have provided, by sharing opinions and giving advice on many structural design issues that I have come across more than once. Thank you!
Second, concerning the subject; I have a pretty clear idea of how shell/membrane elements work when used to model slabs. Now, about the design of the rc-beam supporting that slab, I recently found a comment in an eng-tips forum which suggested that if the slab is being modelled as a shell, one should not design the beam based on the information of such an analysis, because the reinforcement reported is much less than what is truly required.
I have always designed with slab-membrane elements and supporting beam-frame elements. Just recently, I learned about SAFE, and when comparing the bending moments of supporting beams of a membrane-on-frame model (from ETABS) with those of a shell-on-frame model (from SAFE) there is a significative difference, generally lowering the flexural demand of the shell-on-frame model (from SAFE). With these recent founding, and taking advantage of such a tool as SAFE (FEM), what I would do is to design all beams that are part of the lateral-force-resisting-system (LFRS) with a model having all slabs modelled as membrane elements. That way I would be neglecting the slab stiffness in the seismic analysis/design and only rely on the frames and/or walls to resist wind and or earthquake forces.. but those beams that carry gravity loads only I would design using SAFE (the shell-on-frame model) thus benefiting from considering the slab working part of the load out before delivering it to the beam, resulting in an more economic beam design $.
Now, I would do the above mentioned as long as it's safe to proceed that way. That's what I'd like to know your opinion on. I understand it would not be a traditional conservative design (like the membrane-on-frame model), but provided conservative loads and good detailing are a given, do you think it´s a good design approach? or is it not safe at all to design the only-gravity beams for the bending forces that SAFE reports using the shell-on-frame model?.. If so, why is it so?
As I understand, finite element analysis (if correctly used) reports a more realistic scenario in terms of what is going on with stresses and forces; so why would these results be unsafe to use?
Thanks, and greetings from Mexico.
This is my first post.
First of all I would like to thank you all for the help you have provided, by sharing opinions and giving advice on many structural design issues that I have come across more than once. Thank you!
Second, concerning the subject; I have a pretty clear idea of how shell/membrane elements work when used to model slabs. Now, about the design of the rc-beam supporting that slab, I recently found a comment in an eng-tips forum which suggested that if the slab is being modelled as a shell, one should not design the beam based on the information of such an analysis, because the reinforcement reported is much less than what is truly required.
I have always designed with slab-membrane elements and supporting beam-frame elements. Just recently, I learned about SAFE, and when comparing the bending moments of supporting beams of a membrane-on-frame model (from ETABS) with those of a shell-on-frame model (from SAFE) there is a significative difference, generally lowering the flexural demand of the shell-on-frame model (from SAFE). With these recent founding, and taking advantage of such a tool as SAFE (FEM), what I would do is to design all beams that are part of the lateral-force-resisting-system (LFRS) with a model having all slabs modelled as membrane elements. That way I would be neglecting the slab stiffness in the seismic analysis/design and only rely on the frames and/or walls to resist wind and or earthquake forces.. but those beams that carry gravity loads only I would design using SAFE (the shell-on-frame model) thus benefiting from considering the slab working part of the load out before delivering it to the beam, resulting in an more economic beam design $.
Now, I would do the above mentioned as long as it's safe to proceed that way. That's what I'd like to know your opinion on. I understand it would not be a traditional conservative design (like the membrane-on-frame model), but provided conservative loads and good detailing are a given, do you think it´s a good design approach? or is it not safe at all to design the only-gravity beams for the bending forces that SAFE reports using the shell-on-frame model?.. If so, why is it so?
As I understand, finite element analysis (if correctly used) reports a more realistic scenario in terms of what is going on with stresses and forces; so why would these results be unsafe to use?
Thanks, and greetings from Mexico.