saadpervez1
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 27, 2014
- 37
It is understood that there are different failure modes for columns depending upon the relative magnitudes of the applied bending moment and axial load. I am listing them down:
1) Large Axial load, negligible bending moment: failure by crushing of concrete, rft yields in compression
2) Large axial load, small moment, section in compression: failure by crushing of concrete with rft in compression
3) Moment larger than (2) so that tension develops on one side: rft on one side in compression, the other side in tension, concrete crushes on compression side.
4) Balanced Loading condition: self explanatory
5) Large Moment, small axial load: rft yields on the tensile side of the column
6) Large moment, negligible load: pure bending failure, like a beam.
My main concern is with condition no. 6. If we want to analyze an existing column, and we have the forces acting on it. How can we determine whether a pure bending failure is now possible, what are the numerical values, is it only dependant upon the experience of the designer to determine the failure mode or is there a mathematical way to approach it, a ratio or a range of values that governs this. So far my research has yielded nothing.
1) Large Axial load, negligible bending moment: failure by crushing of concrete, rft yields in compression
2) Large axial load, small moment, section in compression: failure by crushing of concrete with rft in compression
3) Moment larger than (2) so that tension develops on one side: rft on one side in compression, the other side in tension, concrete crushes on compression side.
4) Balanced Loading condition: self explanatory
5) Large Moment, small axial load: rft yields on the tensile side of the column
6) Large moment, negligible load: pure bending failure, like a beam.
My main concern is with condition no. 6. If we want to analyze an existing column, and we have the forces acting on it. How can we determine whether a pure bending failure is now possible, what are the numerical values, is it only dependant upon the experience of the designer to determine the failure mode or is there a mathematical way to approach it, a ratio or a range of values that governs this. So far my research has yielded nothing.