Robbiee
Structural
- Jan 10, 2008
- 285
Hi all,
The requirement for providing a minimum level of ductility for structures in certain seismic areas or for certain types of structural systems is to justify the reduction of design earthquake loads for economic reasons and to prevent certain types of materials such as unreinforced concrete block walls to be used. However, for steel and reinforced structures, what I don’t understand why the inelastic design, i.e. design for reduced load with the reliance on inelastic energy dissipating detailing, is safer than elastic design for the full calculated loads. One might say that the design loads could be exceeded in a server event. But, we know that steel and reinforced structures have inherent over strength of a minimum of 30% and if the design load is exceeded, wouldn’t mean that higher than designed ductility is required to dissipate the additional load.
The reason for the question is two conversations I had recently; one with a professor researching the use of carbon fibre as slab reinforcing and concrete reinforcing in general, who agreed that elastically designed structures are not less safe, and the other conversation with a very experience engineer who has won almost every engineering award, who laughed when I said that elastic design is not less safe that in-elastic. Please comment. I wish to know what I am missing here.
The requirement for providing a minimum level of ductility for structures in certain seismic areas or for certain types of structural systems is to justify the reduction of design earthquake loads for economic reasons and to prevent certain types of materials such as unreinforced concrete block walls to be used. However, for steel and reinforced structures, what I don’t understand why the inelastic design, i.e. design for reduced load with the reliance on inelastic energy dissipating detailing, is safer than elastic design for the full calculated loads. One might say that the design loads could be exceeded in a server event. But, we know that steel and reinforced structures have inherent over strength of a minimum of 30% and if the design load is exceeded, wouldn’t mean that higher than designed ductility is required to dissipate the additional load.
The reason for the question is two conversations I had recently; one with a professor researching the use of carbon fibre as slab reinforcing and concrete reinforcing in general, who agreed that elastically designed structures are not less safe, and the other conversation with a very experience engineer who has won almost every engineering award, who laughed when I said that elastic design is not less safe that in-elastic. Please comment. I wish to know what I am missing here.