StructEIT
Structural
- May 28, 2009
- 6
I'm currently working on a large rack in Northern Canada were temperatures can range from -45 to 35 Celsius. For the most part, the structure is designed to deflect so that it does not induce thermal stresses. However, there needs to be an anchor bay to resist lateral loading.
Most people I talk to say they would neglect thermal stresses in this braced bay and assume that the ductility of the bolted structure will allow for sufficient movement to absorb contraction and expansion.
The brace length is something like 11.5m between connection points. Given a construction temperature of 15 Celcius or so, that corresponds to a maximum change of temperature of 15 - (-50) = 65 degrees Celsius.
Some quick math tells me that it's an contraction of 8.75 mm or so. Spec holes for 3/4 inch bolts are only oversized by 3mm. So assuming both ends are centered in the hole, there's only 3mm of total sliding room.
I'm not quite sure how to treat this. There don't seem to be strict guidelines in the Canadian code. The NBC says you don't follow their temperature rules for various qualified codes, which include the steel code. The steel code says to design for the load except if experience, math or engineering judgement say otherwise. The more experienced people I've talked to don't seem to normally take it into account, and if I do, my bracing will be incredibly oversized in comparison to existing structures in the area that don't appear to have issues. You also run into problems where increasing the bracing section sizes increases the temperature forces they induce, which increases sizes everywhere else as well to resist the bracing expansion/contraction forces.
Most people I talk to say they would neglect thermal stresses in this braced bay and assume that the ductility of the bolted structure will allow for sufficient movement to absorb contraction and expansion.
The brace length is something like 11.5m between connection points. Given a construction temperature of 15 Celcius or so, that corresponds to a maximum change of temperature of 15 - (-50) = 65 degrees Celsius.
Some quick math tells me that it's an contraction of 8.75 mm or so. Spec holes for 3/4 inch bolts are only oversized by 3mm. So assuming both ends are centered in the hole, there's only 3mm of total sliding room.
I'm not quite sure how to treat this. There don't seem to be strict guidelines in the Canadian code. The NBC says you don't follow their temperature rules for various qualified codes, which include the steel code. The steel code says to design for the load except if experience, math or engineering judgement say otherwise. The more experienced people I've talked to don't seem to normally take it into account, and if I do, my bracing will be incredibly oversized in comparison to existing structures in the area that don't appear to have issues. You also run into problems where increasing the bracing section sizes increases the temperature forces they induce, which increases sizes everywhere else as well to resist the bracing expansion/contraction forces.