sklev
Structural
- May 24, 2010
- 24
I am designing a concrete column and am trying to calculate the interaction diagrams so I can play with different sizes and amounts of steel and be able to see it visually. I have set up an excel spreasheet to give me values for Mo, Po, Mb, Pb to start my diagram off with.
The problem is not concerning the Blanced Condition, but the condition that solves for where M and P = zero, which follows in the spreadsheet.
The problem is that I end up getting a negative value for f's, which results in a negative value for Cs (boxed in red). I can see that it is caused because my c value is less than my d'.
I was thinking that to solve the problem I would play with my values to get a positive number for f's and Cs, but then I got to wondering whether or not it was necessarily a bad thing that these values came up negative.
I am struggling conceptually. I think that this is saying that the compressive steel is not doing any work and the concrete is taking all of the compressive force.
Can someone please help shed some light on whether or not this is a bad thing, and what excatly is going on conceptually here?
The problem is not concerning the Blanced Condition, but the condition that solves for where M and P = zero, which follows in the spreadsheet.
The problem is that I end up getting a negative value for f's, which results in a negative value for Cs (boxed in red). I can see that it is caused because my c value is less than my d'.
I was thinking that to solve the problem I would play with my values to get a positive number for f's and Cs, but then I got to wondering whether or not it was necessarily a bad thing that these values came up negative.
I am struggling conceptually. I think that this is saying that the compressive steel is not doing any work and the concrete is taking all of the compressive force.
Can someone please help shed some light on whether or not this is a bad thing, and what excatly is going on conceptually here?