O said:
But I just realized that when the redistributed positive moment increase to Mcr value it will be redistributed to elsewhere again and when designing we design to plastic section as centondollar pointed out so the capacity it will be way greater than Mcr... Overthinking here
It sounds to me like you've got a pretty good handle on this and, for the most, did from the start. In general, things proceed like this:
1) For low load levels, nothing has cracked and your elastic stress distribution is fairly valid.
2) Often, your hogging, support moments create the first flexural cracks. Then, until some sagging, mid-span moments develop, the middle of your beam is disproportionately stiffer than the ends relative to your initial elastic assumptions. So, during this part of the load history, the mid-span moments are getting taxed more that an elastic analysis would predict, just as you suggested originally.
3) Eventually, the sagging, mid-span moments also create cracks and things substantially revert back to your original, elastic analysis informed, plastic design assumptions. This is just as you said in your last comment.
All that said, this is far from perfect. Consider:
4) Your supports are likely to always be
more cracked than the mid-span.
5) large segments of your beam between the support and mid-span will likely remain uncracked and these affect load distribution as well.
6) Many modern codes contain provisions limiting the amount of redistribution available based on how heavily reinforced the beam is. There are limits to how much redistribution is possible before high, local strains fracture the bars. They don't just stretch happily forever. The more heavily reinforced your cross section is, the less redistribution is generally possible. And, as you know, beams tend to be quite heavily reinforced at continuous supports.
7) It's unrelated to cracking but there is a dimension in which sagging moments are safer than hogging moments. Hogging moments are usually dependent on what is going on in the adjacent span. Are the loads assumed to be there,
really there? Have accurate assumptions been made about the cracking in those adjacent spans? Who knows...
OP said:
Can anyone please tell me how you consider this in you design? Do you compare the negative moment with Mcr and simply apply the positive moment at mid spans by a amplification factor (what factor is adequate if so?) or do you manually reduce the stiffness of the beam segement at supports in your analysis?
1) We don't do much, frankly, other than to accept that structural engineering is really just the moderately intelligent, course proportioning of things. There's not much "knowing" involved.
2) Where redistribution limits apply, we check them for the final ULS state.
3) I've known several, brilliant, older engineers who have recommended amplifying the sagging, mid-span moments just as you've suggested. I never design my mid-span for anything less than WL^2/20 as a result. This is not very scientific.