IngDod
Structural
- Apr 13, 2013
- 98
Greetings,
Short Version: Is it logical that Im getting high torsion in a beam receiving the ribs of two ribbed decks during earthquake load action?
Long version:
I'm designing a two story concrete house, a rather simple structure.But my area is seismic so i must consider lateral loads. The floor system consists of two spans of one way ribbed slabs, my design approach was first design for gravity loads and then check for lateral loads. For the ribbed slabs i used ACI coefficients to determine their moments and the moment they would transfer to the exterior beams as torsion.. The torsion was much greater than the exterior beam sections given to me by the architect could take; so I assumed redistribution of torsion (This is a compatibility torsion case as I understand) and it was ok; I would detail minimum torsion steel and be done with it. I set up a SAP2000 model to verify my results, I modeled the ribs as independent T-Beams and my approach to model the torsion redistribution was to pin the ribs of the slab at the connection to the exterior beams, leaving it fixed for the beam in the middle. (This is a two bay structure in the direction of the ribs, so three beams, one in the middle of the ribs and two at the ends). As expected the moment coming from both ribs canceled at the middle beam.
My problem started when i applied the response spectrum for the earthquake, I don't know of any approximate hand method to calculate this problem (I know portal and cantilever method, but I honestly don't know how to distribute the horizontal forces from the earthquake to each frame, I know how to distribute base shear vertically to each floor; but not horizontally within each floor). So I decided to use the software for this, but I'm getting a great deal of torsion in the middle beam; basically the ribs of the deck are bending as if they were normal beams from the moment frame and transferring this moment to the beams. Again my question is, is this behavior realistic? or it stems from my way of modelling the slabs... I think Im not getting slab action for horizontal load, only a set of independent beams.
My first impression was that I'm facing an error coming from my flawed technique of modelling the slabs, I have seen many structural book examples about lateral load, and usually they analyze the structure as separate 2D frames.. so a torsion induced by bending of the slabs would be lost I believe.
Short Version: Is it logical that Im getting high torsion in a beam receiving the ribs of two ribbed decks during earthquake load action?
Long version:
I'm designing a two story concrete house, a rather simple structure.But my area is seismic so i must consider lateral loads. The floor system consists of two spans of one way ribbed slabs, my design approach was first design for gravity loads and then check for lateral loads. For the ribbed slabs i used ACI coefficients to determine their moments and the moment they would transfer to the exterior beams as torsion.. The torsion was much greater than the exterior beam sections given to me by the architect could take; so I assumed redistribution of torsion (This is a compatibility torsion case as I understand) and it was ok; I would detail minimum torsion steel and be done with it. I set up a SAP2000 model to verify my results, I modeled the ribs as independent T-Beams and my approach to model the torsion redistribution was to pin the ribs of the slab at the connection to the exterior beams, leaving it fixed for the beam in the middle. (This is a two bay structure in the direction of the ribs, so three beams, one in the middle of the ribs and two at the ends). As expected the moment coming from both ribs canceled at the middle beam.
My problem started when i applied the response spectrum for the earthquake, I don't know of any approximate hand method to calculate this problem (I know portal and cantilever method, but I honestly don't know how to distribute the horizontal forces from the earthquake to each frame, I know how to distribute base shear vertically to each floor; but not horizontally within each floor). So I decided to use the software for this, but I'm getting a great deal of torsion in the middle beam; basically the ribs of the deck are bending as if they were normal beams from the moment frame and transferring this moment to the beams. Again my question is, is this behavior realistic? or it stems from my way of modelling the slabs... I think Im not getting slab action for horizontal load, only a set of independent beams.
My first impression was that I'm facing an error coming from my flawed technique of modelling the slabs, I have seen many structural book examples about lateral load, and usually they analyze the structure as separate 2D frames.. so a torsion induced by bending of the slabs would be lost I believe.