JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,463
Just curious as to what other engineers do in this case:
Steel beam roof framing (could be joists as well) where a metal roof deck spans perpendicular to the exterior wall. When lateral forces are applied to the wall (say a stud wall) there is a lateral reaction at the top of the wall. Usually, we provide a continuous angle that runs down the length of the edge beam to facilitate connection to the wall studs.
Now once the lateral force is transmitted into the angle, and then into the perimeter beam, we assume that it is then transferred into the metal deck diaphragm. However, the question is: can a light gage deck take the lateral force.
The deck is acting as a compression element, taking axial loads, with an unbraced length equal to the beam/joists spacing. Many times, especially in seismic areas, we provide additional steel angles, perpendicular to the wall, directly below the deck and connected to the deck. These angles extend one, two or more roof member spaces into the diaphragm before terminating.
Is there a way to check the deck - alone - as taking this axial load verses always adding these struts to transfer the load into the deck more gradually? Especially so in low seismic areas as in high seismic I'd probably want the hard steel anyway.
You have an unbraced length, an Ix of the deck per foot, and a cross sectional area. Can you just get a KL/r and use AISC compressive capacity equations? AISI?
Steel beam roof framing (could be joists as well) where a metal roof deck spans perpendicular to the exterior wall. When lateral forces are applied to the wall (say a stud wall) there is a lateral reaction at the top of the wall. Usually, we provide a continuous angle that runs down the length of the edge beam to facilitate connection to the wall studs.
Now once the lateral force is transmitted into the angle, and then into the perimeter beam, we assume that it is then transferred into the metal deck diaphragm. However, the question is: can a light gage deck take the lateral force.
The deck is acting as a compression element, taking axial loads, with an unbraced length equal to the beam/joists spacing. Many times, especially in seismic areas, we provide additional steel angles, perpendicular to the wall, directly below the deck and connected to the deck. These angles extend one, two or more roof member spaces into the diaphragm before terminating.
Is there a way to check the deck - alone - as taking this axial load verses always adding these struts to transfer the load into the deck more gradually? Especially so in low seismic areas as in high seismic I'd probably want the hard steel anyway.
You have an unbraced length, an Ix of the deck per foot, and a cross sectional area. Can you just get a KL/r and use AISC compressive capacity equations? AISI?