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ACI Column Loads

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KootK

Structural
Oct 16, 2001
18,575
My question concerns ACI 8.8.1. & 8.9.1

8.8.1 Columns shall be designed to resist the axial forces from factored loads on all floors and roofs and the max moment from factored loads on a single adjacent span of the floor or roof under consideration.

8.9.1. The live load is applied only to the floor or roof under consideration..

Does that suggest one need only consider full axial load (all floors) plus bending moments generated by one loaded floor at a time? Or is this one of those assumptions meant for "hand design". I'm using a 3D FEM model and it concerns me because:

1. Although I consider numerous load cases that I consider more severe than that described by 8.8.8, I don't explicitly consider that particular case itself.

2. ACI doesn't say that I am "permited" to make this assumption; it says that I "shall". Tough language.
 
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AdamP
Noticed that you're posting some questions about concrete columns and how to practically and economically design them for various Pu and Mu values related to Pdelta and alternating live loads.

Prior to the advent of 3D analysis, engineers would typically model a 2D frame cut through the building and alternate live loads in patterns to get single-bending values (rarely have I ever done a biaxial design as I'm not convinced it ever governs).

With 3D you now have a lot more "knowledge" of your structure and the broad CYA language that ACI uses can be taken to an extreme.

I would suggest one way to handle the data coming out of your frame analysis would be with a spreadsheet. With RISA (I think that's what you said you were using) you can copy and paste the Member Forces right off the screen and drop it into a spreadsheet that can be set up to do the following:

1. For each column, under each separate load combination, calculate the value sqrt((Pu)^2 + (Mu)^2). This is a square root of the sum of squares and gives you a fictitious radial measure of the intensity of the P/M combination.

2. With all of the SRSS values (these will all be positive values), divide them into two parts, the upper, maximum half and the lower, minimum half.

3. The upper half will be the only ones to ever govern a column design. Think of your scatter plot of Pu/Mu values on your column interaction diagram. The upper half values will always be closer to the limit state line than the other half.

This doesn't reduce the analysis time but does minimize the number of Pu/Mu combos that you have to work with. You could also, perhaps, take just the upper 25% and still be OK.

As far alternating live loads, I'd still work with as many different span-load combinations that would drive up the design. The code (ACI 318 and others) are always written as a minimum - and as an engineer you should always, obviously, be on the "right" side of that minimum.
 
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