Freddy I think you'd be better off getting hold of some detailed technical papers on this subject. I suggest the professional engineering bodies in US, Australia, UK who all publish their member's submissions and assist members to search for such information.
While I haven't designed a silo for a long time I would recommend you pay very close attention to the effect of eccentricity and of impact during storage/unloading of the material within. Arching of the material itself, whether grain or cement etc can also produce sudden internal impact during loading or unloading.
Wind effects will be important for an unloaded/empty/part empty concrete shell silo. Whether they would govern the design I'm doubtful, except in cyclonic and very high-wind areas. If the slenderness is large you might also have to look at eddy-shedding which will produce oscillating wind forces.
It's a complex topic. I would be doing a whole lot of reading and then practice, practice.
Anthony Tugwell
Project Director & Consulting Engineer - currently in Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia