Once20036
Structural
- Oct 7, 2008
- 533
I've gotten into some discussions with coworkers recently about whether or not it's appropriate to use only 3 shear walls to stabilize a single story building with a flexible diaphragm.
To create an arbitrary example - say you have a 100' x 100' building with a shear wall or lateral frame on the west, north, and east walls.
When the wind blows north/south, I think we can all agree there aren't any issues.
When the wind blows east/west... for a rigid diaphram nobody in the office sees any issues. The north shear wall would take the load and the north/south would act as a pair to eliminate the eccentricity, but is the same true for a flexible diaphragm?
Typically a flexible diaphragm is analyzed as a simply supported beam, and a simply supported beam isn't stable if there's only one support.
A reasonable counter argument is that flexibility only has to do with the difference in stiffness between the supports and the diaphragm. A diaphragm will still have enough stiffness to utilize the east/west walls as torsional restraint.
The first question is simply how other people treat this condition and whether or not it's typical.
The second question is how to quantify that the deck is stiff enough to utilize the torsional restraint.
Thanks in advance!
To create an arbitrary example - say you have a 100' x 100' building with a shear wall or lateral frame on the west, north, and east walls.
When the wind blows north/south, I think we can all agree there aren't any issues.
When the wind blows east/west... for a rigid diaphram nobody in the office sees any issues. The north shear wall would take the load and the north/south would act as a pair to eliminate the eccentricity, but is the same true for a flexible diaphragm?
Typically a flexible diaphragm is analyzed as a simply supported beam, and a simply supported beam isn't stable if there's only one support.
A reasonable counter argument is that flexibility only has to do with the difference in stiffness between the supports and the diaphragm. A diaphragm will still have enough stiffness to utilize the east/west walls as torsional restraint.
The first question is simply how other people treat this condition and whether or not it's typical.
The second question is how to quantify that the deck is stiff enough to utilize the torsional restraint.
Thanks in advance!