OHEcoEng
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 2, 2010
- 32
Hi, all. I am new to these forums and I hope that I can invoke a little interest in the alternative energy field.
I have been a practicing PE for 10 years now in the wastewater/environmental field. I recently made the jump to solar and wind design. I certify electrical diagrams for these systems, and will be designing basic foundations for pole and ground-mounted systems.
Along with this comes structural evaluations of existing roofs, and I'm a bit rusty after being out of school for 15 years. There have been a lot of changes and advances in doing this.
I have been studying ASCE 7-05 for about five days now, and feel rather comfortable with the dead, roof live, and snow loading for our area (Ohio), but I am having trouble getting a grip on the appropriate analysis for wind loading.
This is a 1960's/70's era warehouse, flat roof (1.5 deg slope), built up membrane, no ballast. The roof drains into gutters on the downslope side, so ponding from drain blockage is not a concern. Joists are 28LH06, 6' OC, 50' span.
Following are my parameters:
Roof live load: 20 PSF
Existing dead load: 16.1 PSF (roof, decking, mechanical allowance, insulation, joists, sprinklers/lighting)
Snow load: 25 PSF
Proposed additional PV load (modules, racking, ballast): 8.2 PSF
Wind load data: Occ Cat II
Imp fact., I: 1
Basic wind speed: 80 MPH
Exposure: B
GCpi: +/- 0.18
Using Method 2 for MWFRS, I find a worst case force on the original structure of -15.32 PSF in zone 2E (I didn't find any downforces).
The solar modules are at a 10 deg. tilt...here is where I'm struggling. Do I evaluate this as C&C, or as another MWFRS, and then add my "open structure" forces to the existing building uplift for worst case (downforce on array subtracted from to internal pressure uplift)?
Since the solar modules are not mechanically attached to the roof, the uplift does not transfer to the decking, only additional downforce.
I realize, too, that there are some potential snow drifting issues in the vicinity of the array.
Since this is a standard evaluation that I will be performing on a repetitive basis, I'd like to get this right.
Building is 30 ft tall, 300 ft x 100 ft (load bearing masonry wall at the 50 ft length; utilizing two spans across 100 ft).
I am using LRFD for this evaluation, and have a factored total safe uniform load of 469 PLF. I have calculated 308 PLF for the existing structure, with a maximum uplift of 60.1 PLF.
I have been a practicing PE for 10 years now in the wastewater/environmental field. I recently made the jump to solar and wind design. I certify electrical diagrams for these systems, and will be designing basic foundations for pole and ground-mounted systems.
Along with this comes structural evaluations of existing roofs, and I'm a bit rusty after being out of school for 15 years. There have been a lot of changes and advances in doing this.
I have been studying ASCE 7-05 for about five days now, and feel rather comfortable with the dead, roof live, and snow loading for our area (Ohio), but I am having trouble getting a grip on the appropriate analysis for wind loading.
This is a 1960's/70's era warehouse, flat roof (1.5 deg slope), built up membrane, no ballast. The roof drains into gutters on the downslope side, so ponding from drain blockage is not a concern. Joists are 28LH06, 6' OC, 50' span.
Following are my parameters:
Roof live load: 20 PSF
Existing dead load: 16.1 PSF (roof, decking, mechanical allowance, insulation, joists, sprinklers/lighting)
Snow load: 25 PSF
Proposed additional PV load (modules, racking, ballast): 8.2 PSF
Wind load data: Occ Cat II
Imp fact., I: 1
Basic wind speed: 80 MPH
Exposure: B
GCpi: +/- 0.18
Using Method 2 for MWFRS, I find a worst case force on the original structure of -15.32 PSF in zone 2E (I didn't find any downforces).
The solar modules are at a 10 deg. tilt...here is where I'm struggling. Do I evaluate this as C&C, or as another MWFRS, and then add my "open structure" forces to the existing building uplift for worst case (downforce on array subtracted from to internal pressure uplift)?
Since the solar modules are not mechanically attached to the roof, the uplift does not transfer to the decking, only additional downforce.
I realize, too, that there are some potential snow drifting issues in the vicinity of the array.
Since this is a standard evaluation that I will be performing on a repetitive basis, I'd like to get this right.
Building is 30 ft tall, 300 ft x 100 ft (load bearing masonry wall at the 50 ft length; utilizing two spans across 100 ft).
I am using LRFD for this evaluation, and have a factored total safe uniform load of 469 PLF. I have calculated 308 PLF for the existing structure, with a maximum uplift of 60.1 PLF.