AZengineer
Structural
- Apr 3, 2005
- 46
Looking for some opinions regarding local buckling of lips on cold formed steel C-purlins.
The subject building is comprised of 10 inch deep C-purlins spanning (continuously via bolted splices) over girts spaced at 20' o.c. No bridging is installed in the building. Sprinkler pipes are suspended from the purlins via steel rods which penetrate the bottom flange of the purlins attached to nuts with washers (no double nuts - just a nut and washer to provide bearing). During heavy snow, twisting of the purlins was observed, which subsided when the snow was removed.
The lips (not the flanges themselves) of the purlins exhibit deformations in the immediate vicinity of the steel rod penetrations. I assume that the deformations were caused lateral torsional movement of the purlins which compressed the lips, causing a localized failure.
What stumps me is why the lips have buckled not only at midspan locations, but also at locations near the girts. The purlins are continuous, so these regions are likely under negative bending, or at least not regions of maximum positive bending. I guess the heart of my question relates to the effects of lateral torsional buckling induced lip crippling, and the effects of point loads induced on the flanges of nonsymmetric cold formed sections.
The subject building is comprised of 10 inch deep C-purlins spanning (continuously via bolted splices) over girts spaced at 20' o.c. No bridging is installed in the building. Sprinkler pipes are suspended from the purlins via steel rods which penetrate the bottom flange of the purlins attached to nuts with washers (no double nuts - just a nut and washer to provide bearing). During heavy snow, twisting of the purlins was observed, which subsided when the snow was removed.
The lips (not the flanges themselves) of the purlins exhibit deformations in the immediate vicinity of the steel rod penetrations. I assume that the deformations were caused lateral torsional movement of the purlins which compressed the lips, causing a localized failure.
What stumps me is why the lips have buckled not only at midspan locations, but also at locations near the girts. The purlins are continuous, so these regions are likely under negative bending, or at least not regions of maximum positive bending. I guess the heart of my question relates to the effects of lateral torsional buckling induced lip crippling, and the effects of point loads induced on the flanges of nonsymmetric cold formed sections.