fa2070
Structural
- Jun 6, 2007
- 58
Hello,
Think of a circular roofless tank constructed of precast concrete panels supported on a concrete ring footing. See the following picture.
My question: How do I analyze this cylindrical shell? Is this a hinged or a fixed base? Or is it a partially fixed configuration? I recall having read in distinct sources that almost all tanks are considered hinged at the base, save those (most notably cast in place tanks) where the design contemplates monolithism between the wall, footing and floor, in which case they're analyzed with a fixed base.
Now back to my case. Although it's true there's no continuity between the floor/wall steel, it is evident X and Y translations, as well as rotation are restrained. So, how do I analyze this?
a) hinged base - free top
b) fixed base - free top
c) partially fixed base - free top
Thanks in advance.
Think of a circular roofless tank constructed of precast concrete panels supported on a concrete ring footing. See the following picture.

My question: How do I analyze this cylindrical shell? Is this a hinged or a fixed base? Or is it a partially fixed configuration? I recall having read in distinct sources that almost all tanks are considered hinged at the base, save those (most notably cast in place tanks) where the design contemplates monolithism between the wall, footing and floor, in which case they're analyzed with a fixed base.
Now back to my case. Although it's true there's no continuity between the floor/wall steel, it is evident X and Y translations, as well as rotation are restrained. So, how do I analyze this?
a) hinged base - free top
b) fixed base - free top
c) partially fixed base - free top
Thanks in advance.