SKIAK
Structural
- Mar 18, 2008
- 145
I started working on a project a while ago for an underground concrete vault. The lid of the vault was initially removable so I was considering pin-pin end conditions. As the project progressed the vault got wider and deeper so the depth of the lid started getting thick. In an effort to reduce the thickness of the lid it was changed to a cast in place lid and was (conservatively) assumed fully fixed. After detailing the rebar, it was suggested that I try to model a rotational spring at the corners to help account for the relative stiffness of the members and try to reduce the negative moment. I placed a unit moment at each corner (one at a time), found the rotation and got my "spring constant." I then placed a rotational spring at both corners with their relative stiffness. This ended up reducing the negative moment in the wall by about 1/3 and increased the negative moment in the lid slightly. Say the negative moment at the corner was 30 ft-kips, the top of the wall went to 20 ft-kips and the end of the lid went to 31 ft-kips.
In all honesty, after several other complications, the whole thing was eventually modeled in SAP2000, but I could never figure out why the RISA-2D approach didn't work. Has anybody tried this or have any suggestions?
In all honesty, after several other complications, the whole thing was eventually modeled in SAP2000, but I could never figure out why the RISA-2D approach didn't work. Has anybody tried this or have any suggestions?