Italo01
Structural
- Sep 4, 2021
- 169
Hello,
I'll design a two storey building that must be unbraced on both directions (architrctural reasons).Because of this restriction, i'll place beam with strong axis on both directions on the perimeter and provide moment connections. Since its a low-rise building, i don't think that wind will be a great problem but i'm trying to be very careful with the analysis.
I looked a very nice method called Wind moment method by SCI(UK) but my building does not satisfy some assumptions, so i'm using a software called Strap.
My problem is the following:
I contacted the software company and the said that at the stage of frame analysis, the software does not consider the stiffness difference between the sagging and hogging regions of the composite beam, considering a uniform stiffness throughout the beam. At the design stage, the software considers this difference to calculate the beam displacements, but using the bending moments obtained from the previous simplified frame analysis.
Since for wind load the moments on the beams will depend on the stiffness(increasing for a increase in stiffness), if a consider the sagging stiffness for the whole beam, i will obtain smaller sway deflections, greater bending moments on the beams and smaller on the column bases.
In order to accurately predict the stiffness, i would have to break the beams on the zero moment points and change stiffness from the hogging moment manually, but this will br a iteractive process, since when i change the stiffness the bending moments will change, moving the zero moment points. I expected the software to do this iteractions and got a bit frustrated with their answer. They said that nobody does this, as if i'm being irrational.
Am i overreacting?
Would be appopriate to use the uniform stiffess for the beam, reducing a little bit my allowable sway deflection and counting on the plastic LBT of plastic analysis to just accept the bending moments obtained?
Thank you in advance.
I'll design a two storey building that must be unbraced on both directions (architrctural reasons).Because of this restriction, i'll place beam with strong axis on both directions on the perimeter and provide moment connections. Since its a low-rise building, i don't think that wind will be a great problem but i'm trying to be very careful with the analysis.
I looked a very nice method called Wind moment method by SCI(UK) but my building does not satisfy some assumptions, so i'm using a software called Strap.
My problem is the following:
I contacted the software company and the said that at the stage of frame analysis, the software does not consider the stiffness difference between the sagging and hogging regions of the composite beam, considering a uniform stiffness throughout the beam. At the design stage, the software considers this difference to calculate the beam displacements, but using the bending moments obtained from the previous simplified frame analysis.
Since for wind load the moments on the beams will depend on the stiffness(increasing for a increase in stiffness), if a consider the sagging stiffness for the whole beam, i will obtain smaller sway deflections, greater bending moments on the beams and smaller on the column bases.
In order to accurately predict the stiffness, i would have to break the beams on the zero moment points and change stiffness from the hogging moment manually, but this will br a iteractive process, since when i change the stiffness the bending moments will change, moving the zero moment points. I expected the software to do this iteractions and got a bit frustrated with their answer. They said that nobody does this, as if i'm being irrational.
Am i overreacting?
Would be appopriate to use the uniform stiffess for the beam, reducing a little bit my allowable sway deflection and counting on the plastic LBT of plastic analysis to just accept the bending moments obtained?
Thank you in advance.