Catjacob
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 23, 2006
- 37
Hello,
I am doing the design check of a multi-span steel composite box girder viaduct but struggle to get elastic buckling analysis done.
To check the stability of the bare steel section under self weight of fresh concrete (i.e a steel trough supporting wet conrete), I set up a 3D model formed of shell elements and 3D beams. The 3D beams are used to model stiffeners and steel narrow top flanges, see the first screenshot.
What I want to see is lateral (torsional) buckling of the whole span. However, strutural analysis program shows that at least the first 30 buckling modes are local failure of the web plates between plan bracing, the second and third picture refer. no overall buckling modes are found.
Typical span of the vaiduct is 50m and ALL bracing members are 200mm diameter circular hollow sections.
Does anybody think the web plates are too thin or bracings are not close enough?
I am doing the design check of a multi-span steel composite box girder viaduct but struggle to get elastic buckling analysis done.
To check the stability of the bare steel section under self weight of fresh concrete (i.e a steel trough supporting wet conrete), I set up a 3D model formed of shell elements and 3D beams. The 3D beams are used to model stiffeners and steel narrow top flanges, see the first screenshot.
What I want to see is lateral (torsional) buckling of the whole span. However, strutural analysis program shows that at least the first 30 buckling modes are local failure of the web plates between plan bracing, the second and third picture refer. no overall buckling modes are found.
Typical span of the vaiduct is 50m and ALL bracing members are 200mm diameter circular hollow sections.
Does anybody think the web plates are too thin or bracings are not close enough?
http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=7a7e3685-e19d-4cb2-b177-86448316cb10&file=Flesh.jpg