hocho
Structural
- Aug 26, 2015
- 98
In walls perpendicular to the seismic direction.. do you use the full height of the wall in computing for the seismic weight or one half of height only.. and what is the basis for half height only as some do?
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You use the full height of the wall for the seismic mass and apply that at mid height of the wall which means that, by statics, half of the seismic mass ends up at the floor above the wall and half of the seismic mass ends up at the floor below the wall.
The full gravity is carried by the beam below. Seismic load, like wind load, is laterally oriented and therefore distributed to the high and low floor plates via wall flexure.
hocho said:Just would like to confirm if column is the collector itself.
hocho said:Also in upper floor of any building that use light plastic roofing and there is no roof diaphragm.. where will the seismic load of the upper wall go? to the existing floor that holds the roof or the upper wall simply bend without contributing to the floor?
Unless the top storey perimeter wall system is cantilevered from the floor below, which would be very rare, there pretty much has to be a roof diaphragm of some sort. That could include:
1) Roof deck acting as a diaphragm or;
2) Horizontal trussing in the roof plane acting as the diaphragm.
OP said:So in this case, the entire wall of the top floors are taken laterally by the floor? or would the wall just bend in flexure and the lateral load the same?
This is essentially a cantilevered wall system and all of the wall seismic mass would be transferred to the floor diaphragm below. You'd also wind up with seismic moments being applied to the floor diaphragm as well. In my market, a screen wall like this would probably be concrete if it were to be installed on top of an otherwise concrete building. Maybe steel post and girts if aesthetic concerns were minimal.
The full gravity is carried by the beam below. Seismic load, like wind load, is laterally oriented and therefore distributed to the high and low floor plates via wall flexure.
When it comes to the seismic demand on the walls, the demand is a function of acceleration, not displacement. As such, all else being equal, I would expect the seismic demand on a wall at the top floor of a three story building to be greater than the seismic demand on a wall at the top of a 90 story building. Of course, there are all kinds of exceptions and things get murky when considering medium height buildings. The only reliable answer is "it depends on the anticipated floor accelerations generated by your structural analysis effort."