questionator
Structural
- Oct 30, 2023
- 3
Hello,
Young engineer here. I have an unconditioned building that I'm reinforcing with tension rods for lateral restraint. I was going to pretension the rods to counteract tension loss from thermal effects and keep the rod engaged in the event of seismic activity/reduce punching force from accelerations. I'm finding that to do so, the pre tension in the rod would need to be almost as high as the rod capacity.
Two questions -
1) Could someone help me sanity check the force I would need to overcome with pretensioning? I used a coefficient of thermal expansion = 8.8E-6 for a 316 stainless steel, 14ft long, 1" dia. rod with 60 degree F temperature change. I am getting 12 kips of force that would need to be overcome. (This assumes an install temp around 40 deg F).
2) As someone pointed it out in this related post , the magnitude of elongation from thermal expansion is relatively small ~3/32" at each end for this temperature change, which seems incredibly small. How are pretensioned rods designed for unconditioned/exterior environments if such a small change in length creates such a large force?
Thanks!
Young engineer here. I have an unconditioned building that I'm reinforcing with tension rods for lateral restraint. I was going to pretension the rods to counteract tension loss from thermal effects and keep the rod engaged in the event of seismic activity/reduce punching force from accelerations. I'm finding that to do so, the pre tension in the rod would need to be almost as high as the rod capacity.
Two questions -
1) Could someone help me sanity check the force I would need to overcome with pretensioning? I used a coefficient of thermal expansion = 8.8E-6 for a 316 stainless steel, 14ft long, 1" dia. rod with 60 degree F temperature change. I am getting 12 kips of force that would need to be overcome. (This assumes an install temp around 40 deg F).
2) As someone pointed it out in this related post , the magnitude of elongation from thermal expansion is relatively small ~3/32" at each end for this temperature change, which seems incredibly small. How are pretensioned rods designed for unconditioned/exterior environments if such a small change in length creates such a large force?
Thanks!