andriver
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 29, 2015
- 154
Ladies and gents,
I am in the process of designing a double web plate girder, the girder tapers towards the ends. At the center of my plate girder, where the flanges are the widest is where my questions applies.
I have been treating my double web plate girder as a box girder, using section F7 in AISC. At the center though, where my flange is the widest, the flange sticking outside of my "box" girder are non-compact. I had originally used equation F7-2 for Flange Local Buckling, using the entire section/plastic modulus of the shape. When my calculations were first checked, a more senior engineer said I should be using section F3, where I used EQ F3-1. This lowered my capacity significantly.
I checked my results with a Bentley structural analysis software, that has a double web plate girder section. When I run through it's printout, it uses Section F7 EQ F7-2 for the bending capacity. This jives with my original approach, however I noticed the capacity was significantly higher in the model output. Digging through the numbers, it is because on EQ F7-2, it uses my entire girder flange width as b in the b/tf term. I however had only used the flange width between my box girder as my b in the b/tf term.
My questions are, how would you approach solving this problem. If you agree with treating it as a box girder (even though the flanges outside the box are non-compact), which value would you use for b?
Thanks for any help. Attachment hopefully helps clear up any confusion.
I am in the process of designing a double web plate girder, the girder tapers towards the ends. At the center of my plate girder, where the flanges are the widest is where my questions applies.
I have been treating my double web plate girder as a box girder, using section F7 in AISC. At the center though, where my flange is the widest, the flange sticking outside of my "box" girder are non-compact. I had originally used equation F7-2 for Flange Local Buckling, using the entire section/plastic modulus of the shape. When my calculations were first checked, a more senior engineer said I should be using section F3, where I used EQ F3-1. This lowered my capacity significantly.
I checked my results with a Bentley structural analysis software, that has a double web plate girder section. When I run through it's printout, it uses Section F7 EQ F7-2 for the bending capacity. This jives with my original approach, however I noticed the capacity was significantly higher in the model output. Digging through the numbers, it is because on EQ F7-2, it uses my entire girder flange width as b in the b/tf term. I however had only used the flange width between my box girder as my b in the b/tf term.
My questions are, how would you approach solving this problem. If you agree with treating it as a box girder (even though the flanges outside the box are non-compact), which value would you use for b?
Thanks for any help. Attachment hopefully helps clear up any confusion.