andiron780
Structural
- Mar 27, 2002
- 3
now many discussion on shearwall have been presented and yet it is only confounding to say the least..now the commercially available softwares like etabs/sap etc recommend modelling shwall as shell elements but the great wilson has cautioned against indiscriminate usage of the such 2-d elements and infact attested to the superiority of the frame elements esp in the context of the poor bending behavior by the shell element (constant shear vs varying)...
more importantly in etabs: a simple shearwall (say 1'x10') is modelled by just one element per floor (is there a point in meshing it further??)and boundary condition at the bottom is, by default, restraint at the 2 corners (ob viously not continous support since it is 1 element of FEM..is this largely fine (etabs suggest aspect ratio less than 3 for an element is ok (no matter how big is the element??)..Now pier feature in etabs, i think, does the integration for the shell forces and gives familiar moment/shear/axial force etc..now moment essentially can be viewed as T-C couple at the 2 ends and instead of modelling w/ 1 element if one modells wall in 3 different element w/ 2 end zones as C-T and interior as "inert"..(this is a simplistic shwall design while some can do elaborate m-p analysis just like columns) Is this OK? any inputs..?this rectangular element will show net axial load as 0..
About an L shaped wall being designed by 2 elements (each leg of L) per floor..now the flange will show T (or c in reverse wind/seismic condition) and the element will show C (or T)..moments are considerably reduced , as compared to rectangle above, as substantial C-T action can exist (is anyone with me here?..that flange is more than useful than simply providing high moment of inertia if one used the old time modelling by frame elements..)
also warping: none of the commerically available programs that i know address it and yet research indicated that warping will change longitudinal stresses considerably..
besides, the usual assumption of rigid diaphragm for the floor ain't completely true when the building sways the slab would bend out of plane..
so lots of iffies..folks...but i would like someone to dwell on etabs/sap modelling...and meshing of the walls (further from simple 1 element) when that is critical and when it is not...
more importantly in etabs: a simple shearwall (say 1'x10') is modelled by just one element per floor (is there a point in meshing it further??)and boundary condition at the bottom is, by default, restraint at the 2 corners (ob viously not continous support since it is 1 element of FEM..is this largely fine (etabs suggest aspect ratio less than 3 for an element is ok (no matter how big is the element??)..Now pier feature in etabs, i think, does the integration for the shell forces and gives familiar moment/shear/axial force etc..now moment essentially can be viewed as T-C couple at the 2 ends and instead of modelling w/ 1 element if one modells wall in 3 different element w/ 2 end zones as C-T and interior as "inert"..(this is a simplistic shwall design while some can do elaborate m-p analysis just like columns) Is this OK? any inputs..?this rectangular element will show net axial load as 0..
About an L shaped wall being designed by 2 elements (each leg of L) per floor..now the flange will show T (or c in reverse wind/seismic condition) and the element will show C (or T)..moments are considerably reduced , as compared to rectangle above, as substantial C-T action can exist (is anyone with me here?..that flange is more than useful than simply providing high moment of inertia if one used the old time modelling by frame elements..)
also warping: none of the commerically available programs that i know address it and yet research indicated that warping will change longitudinal stresses considerably..
besides, the usual assumption of rigid diaphragm for the floor ain't completely true when the building sways the slab would bend out of plane..
so lots of iffies..folks...but i would like someone to dwell on etabs/sap modelling...and meshing of the walls (further from simple 1 element) when that is critical and when it is not...