aljosa_90
Mechanical
- Aug 18, 2018
- 8
Hello everybody, I hope you're all doing well.
I would really appreciate some input and wisdom on how to approach a structural design problem I am dealing with.
I'm in the middle of designing a floor plate that's going to be the ground floor of a maintenance platform. The plate will be ASTM A1011, Grade 36 Type 1 Hot Rolled Carbon Steel (yield strength = 36.3 ksi; E = 29,000 ksi), and will carry an evenly-distributed load of 115.6 lb/ft2. The plate will be 3/8" thick with dimensions of 8' x 1.67'. I will have beams and joists at the boundaries of those dimensions, and will mechanically fix the plate to them.
My question is, how should I go about determining the bending stress, shear stress and deflection for this plate?
I had modeled the problem on paper using the LRFD method from AISC 360 (2016 ed.), using Section F.11 for the bending and Section G.4 for the shear. But I am positive my results are incorrect because my solution considers only a two-dimensional cross-section that is fixed on two sides whereas I really have a plate that's fixed on four sides. My calcs are attached.
I've done some research and found: (1) that plate theory is hard, and (2) that W.T. Moody published some neat tables that describes variations of different types of loading on flat plates under various boundary conditions. That being said, the length-to-width ratio in this particular instance is ~0.208 and I wasn't able to find a table in the Moody book that corresponds to those dimensions.
My belief is that the stresses I calculated in the attached sheets are going to be significantly higher than those in reality because the plate is fixed on four sides, and those fixtures will absorb much of the stresses from the applied load. However, I really want to show this on paper.
So what methods do structural engineers use to solve this problem? I assume it's rather common since maintenance platforms are often designed to have flat plates for the flooring, but right now I'm at a loss. I really think this is a valuable learning exercise and I'd love to get to the bottom of it. Any help is appreciated!
Floor Plate Calcs
I would really appreciate some input and wisdom on how to approach a structural design problem I am dealing with.
I'm in the middle of designing a floor plate that's going to be the ground floor of a maintenance platform. The plate will be ASTM A1011, Grade 36 Type 1 Hot Rolled Carbon Steel (yield strength = 36.3 ksi; E = 29,000 ksi), and will carry an evenly-distributed load of 115.6 lb/ft2. The plate will be 3/8" thick with dimensions of 8' x 1.67'. I will have beams and joists at the boundaries of those dimensions, and will mechanically fix the plate to them.
My question is, how should I go about determining the bending stress, shear stress and deflection for this plate?
I had modeled the problem on paper using the LRFD method from AISC 360 (2016 ed.), using Section F.11 for the bending and Section G.4 for the shear. But I am positive my results are incorrect because my solution considers only a two-dimensional cross-section that is fixed on two sides whereas I really have a plate that's fixed on four sides. My calcs are attached.
I've done some research and found: (1) that plate theory is hard, and (2) that W.T. Moody published some neat tables that describes variations of different types of loading on flat plates under various boundary conditions. That being said, the length-to-width ratio in this particular instance is ~0.208 and I wasn't able to find a table in the Moody book that corresponds to those dimensions.
My belief is that the stresses I calculated in the attached sheets are going to be significantly higher than those in reality because the plate is fixed on four sides, and those fixtures will absorb much of the stresses from the applied load. However, I really want to show this on paper.
So what methods do structural engineers use to solve this problem? I assume it's rather common since maintenance platforms are often designed to have flat plates for the flooring, but right now I'm at a loss. I really think this is a valuable learning exercise and I'd love to get to the bottom of it. Any help is appreciated!
Floor Plate Calcs