UtahAggiePE
Structural
- Dec 11, 2014
- 20
Here is the background. With design of glass facades for buildings you often need to strengthen the vertical members (mullions) that transfer the wind loads to the floor slabs by inserting steel cross sections that fit snugly so the steel member and the aluminum member act together, but they are non-composite. This is done for controlling deflection or reducing the stress on the aluminum section.
For deflection behavior it is a simple matter to multiply the steel moment of inertia by the modular ratio add it to the aluminum moment of inertia.
The question I have is, for this situation, how does one combine the section modulus of the steel and aluminum when computing stresses? It seems overly conservative to simply add the two, but it doesn't make obvious sense to multiply the steel by the modular ratio either.
Thanks, in advance.
For deflection behavior it is a simple matter to multiply the steel moment of inertia by the modular ratio add it to the aluminum moment of inertia.
The question I have is, for this situation, how does one combine the section modulus of the steel and aluminum when computing stresses? It seems overly conservative to simply add the two, but it doesn't make obvious sense to multiply the steel by the modular ratio either.
Thanks, in advance.