bkal
Structural
- Feb 27, 2003
- 272
Hello,
I have been struggling with this for some time and I can only conclude that some of my basic assumptions are wrong.
We need to provide a steel liner (3-5mm thick steel plates) to a single room in a large reinforced concrete structure (~1m thick concrete). The steel liner plates will be welded onto flats / steel profiles embedded (anchored) into the concrete on a grid approximately 1m x 1m. The liner goes only half way up the wall, and then stops, it is covering all the floor area of the room.
There is a possibility that the temperature in the room can suddenly increase by 100deg C, which means that the temperature of the liner is going to be (for some period opf time) significanlty higher than the temperature of concrete it is connected to. Concrete is also restrained from free expansion by surrounding concrete (only that single room in a large building is lined and can experience high temperature). The issue is that the in-plane force the liner puts into the embedded elements is very high, which is causing problems for its anchorage.
While it can be argued that the embedded elements do not experience any high net (in plane) force if it is supporting two liner plates, the top embedded elements in the walls have only one plate attached to it so will see a high net force.
I would appreciate if anybody can advise if I am getting my physics / mechanics wrong, or if there are any clever solutions to this issue.
Thanks in advance.
I have been struggling with this for some time and I can only conclude that some of my basic assumptions are wrong.
We need to provide a steel liner (3-5mm thick steel plates) to a single room in a large reinforced concrete structure (~1m thick concrete). The steel liner plates will be welded onto flats / steel profiles embedded (anchored) into the concrete on a grid approximately 1m x 1m. The liner goes only half way up the wall, and then stops, it is covering all the floor area of the room.
There is a possibility that the temperature in the room can suddenly increase by 100deg C, which means that the temperature of the liner is going to be (for some period opf time) significanlty higher than the temperature of concrete it is connected to. Concrete is also restrained from free expansion by surrounding concrete (only that single room in a large building is lined and can experience high temperature). The issue is that the in-plane force the liner puts into the embedded elements is very high, which is causing problems for its anchorage.
While it can be argued that the embedded elements do not experience any high net (in plane) force if it is supporting two liner plates, the top embedded elements in the walls have only one plate attached to it so will see a high net force.
I would appreciate if anybody can advise if I am getting my physics / mechanics wrong, or if there are any clever solutions to this issue.
Thanks in advance.