youngstructural
Structural
- Aug 17, 2004
- 713
Hello All;
I appologize in advance to our American friends; I know that the ACI 318 has this procedure only because the New Zealand code [NZS 3102:2006] states that it is taken from ACI 318-02. I am looking for some guidance on the application of cl. 11.3.5.1.2 in NZS 3101:2006. Clause 11.3.5.1.2 “Design moment and P-delta effects – simplified method” uses a combination of applied moment and axial load in determining the total moment for the calculation of the design moment. Considering a typical multi-storey tilt-up wall panel, which of the following procedures meets the intent of the code?
1) Calculate the moment on the wall from the eccentricity of bearing point for floors framing into the wall, apply this as Ma* and then calculate N* (design axial load on the wall) which must include the floor and roof loads, apply ?u term to N* and sum the result with Ma* find the total design moment. (Unlikely, as this double the effect of the floor loads)
2) Calculate Ma* from the floor loads with their bearing eccentricity, and consider only the wall self-weight in calculation of N* for this clause, apply ?u term to the resulting N*, and sum the two to find M*.
3) Ignore bearing eccentricity of the floors and roof, and consider only atypical exterior loads (perhaps beams framing into the wall, or a torsional loading such as a motor starting up) as being Ma* loads. This would mean that the calculation of the moment on the wall would be independent of the actual eccentricity of loading on the wall, and based purely on an assumed parabolic deflected shape of the wall.
Which of these procedures, if any, matches the intent of the code? Reading the code to the letter, it would seem that number 1 is the correct answer, however this results in quite high moments, since it in effectively doubles the effect of the floor and roof loads. I am tempted to approach the problem as per number 2, however this would mean using a reduced N* value, which is not what the code says to consider.
Thank you in advance for your help and opinions...
Regards,
YS
B.Eng (Carleton)
Working in New Zealand, thinking of my snow covered home...
I appologize in advance to our American friends; I know that the ACI 318 has this procedure only because the New Zealand code [NZS 3102:2006] states that it is taken from ACI 318-02. I am looking for some guidance on the application of cl. 11.3.5.1.2 in NZS 3101:2006. Clause 11.3.5.1.2 “Design moment and P-delta effects – simplified method” uses a combination of applied moment and axial load in determining the total moment for the calculation of the design moment. Considering a typical multi-storey tilt-up wall panel, which of the following procedures meets the intent of the code?
1) Calculate the moment on the wall from the eccentricity of bearing point for floors framing into the wall, apply this as Ma* and then calculate N* (design axial load on the wall) which must include the floor and roof loads, apply ?u term to N* and sum the result with Ma* find the total design moment. (Unlikely, as this double the effect of the floor loads)
2) Calculate Ma* from the floor loads with their bearing eccentricity, and consider only the wall self-weight in calculation of N* for this clause, apply ?u term to the resulting N*, and sum the two to find M*.
3) Ignore bearing eccentricity of the floors and roof, and consider only atypical exterior loads (perhaps beams framing into the wall, or a torsional loading such as a motor starting up) as being Ma* loads. This would mean that the calculation of the moment on the wall would be independent of the actual eccentricity of loading on the wall, and based purely on an assumed parabolic deflected shape of the wall.
Which of these procedures, if any, matches the intent of the code? Reading the code to the letter, it would seem that number 1 is the correct answer, however this results in quite high moments, since it in effectively doubles the effect of the floor and roof loads. I am tempted to approach the problem as per number 2, however this would mean using a reduced N* value, which is not what the code says to consider.
Thank you in advance for your help and opinions...
Regards,
YS
B.Eng (Carleton)
Working in New Zealand, thinking of my snow covered home...