abusementpark
Structural
- Dec 23, 2007
- 1,086
Does anyone here know how to calculate the buckling capacity of a metal deck due to an in-plane compression load?
I am thinking about the common scenario where lateral load on wall studs is transferred along the roof edge thru the connection of the metal roof deck to the edge beam. For typical floor-to-floor heights and beam/joist spacings, we assume that the load gets transferred without locally failing the deck in the compression, but there must be some limit. For example, what if the wall studs are spanning >25' with a large parapet and the beam spacing on the roof is >10'. The force transferred becomes much more significant and the larger beam spacing increases the "unbraced length" of the deck. I start to get concerned about the deck capacity.
Has anyone found a way to check this?
I am thinking about the common scenario where lateral load on wall studs is transferred along the roof edge thru the connection of the metal roof deck to the edge beam. For typical floor-to-floor heights and beam/joist spacings, we assume that the load gets transferred without locally failing the deck in the compression, but there must be some limit. For example, what if the wall studs are spanning >25' with a large parapet and the beam spacing on the roof is >10'. The force transferred becomes much more significant and the larger beam spacing increases the "unbraced length" of the deck. I start to get concerned about the deck capacity.
Has anyone found a way to check this?