psychedomination
Structural
- Jan 21, 2016
- 123
Hi there, I am designing a slab on grade for a standard iso shipping container to rest on, where it will remain as a storage container.
This should be quite a simple analysis but I am struggling a bit and trying to understand how the structural system will behave so that I can carry out a conservative analysis and design. I’m not sure if I am going about analysing the structure in the right way, so I can use some help. Essentially I am looking for a lower bound analysis approach, where I can quickly and conservatively do the checks by hand. I don’t have access to FEA and for something this small wouldn’t expect to need it.
The container has a dead load of 22kN and is subject to a 66kN normal force from wind (acting on the longer side), which results in a moment about the container minor axis of 101kNm. I am just designing the foundation for the container not doing anything to the container itself.
I was thinking of a connection detail for the container and think twist-locks welded to a base plate anchored into the foundation should work fine.
With this system, there will be concentrated loads from the container at each of the four twist-lock locations.
To get the loading on each twist-lock connection, I split the system in half along the long side (effectively splitting the moment in half)… therefore 101/2 = 50.5kNm per side.
I then converted the moment into a couple to get the compression and tensions forces in the front and back twist-lock connections respectively; using 50.5/3.05 = 16.56kN in tension and in compression. For analysis sake say front twist-lock in compression and back in tension.
Load summary :
- Container is 22kN in total so 5.6kN vertical load in each corner twist-lock location.
- Concrete strip footing has a vertical load of 4.47kN/m
- tension (uplift) on one twist lock is 16.56kN
- Compression on one twist lock is 16.56kN
I sized the footing to prevent sliding and overturning but where I’m kind of stuck is how to conservatively calculate the bending moments to design the strip footing, considering the point loads and uplift? I’m essentially viewing it like a beam? See attached sketches/rough calcs.
This should be quite a simple analysis but I am struggling a bit and trying to understand how the structural system will behave so that I can carry out a conservative analysis and design. I’m not sure if I am going about analysing the structure in the right way, so I can use some help. Essentially I am looking for a lower bound analysis approach, where I can quickly and conservatively do the checks by hand. I don’t have access to FEA and for something this small wouldn’t expect to need it.
The container has a dead load of 22kN and is subject to a 66kN normal force from wind (acting on the longer side), which results in a moment about the container minor axis of 101kNm. I am just designing the foundation for the container not doing anything to the container itself.
I was thinking of a connection detail for the container and think twist-locks welded to a base plate anchored into the foundation should work fine.
With this system, there will be concentrated loads from the container at each of the four twist-lock locations.
To get the loading on each twist-lock connection, I split the system in half along the long side (effectively splitting the moment in half)… therefore 101/2 = 50.5kNm per side.
I then converted the moment into a couple to get the compression and tensions forces in the front and back twist-lock connections respectively; using 50.5/3.05 = 16.56kN in tension and in compression. For analysis sake say front twist-lock in compression and back in tension.
Load summary :
- Container is 22kN in total so 5.6kN vertical load in each corner twist-lock location.
- Concrete strip footing has a vertical load of 4.47kN/m
- tension (uplift) on one twist lock is 16.56kN
- Compression on one twist lock is 16.56kN
I sized the footing to prevent sliding and overturning but where I’m kind of stuck is how to conservatively calculate the bending moments to design the strip footing, considering the point loads and uplift? I’m essentially viewing it like a beam? See attached sketches/rough calcs.