Hokie said:
@KootK: Yes, that is what I had in mind.
Yeah, that would be... much easier really.
OP said:
The transformed section that is used is as shown in Case 1 of the attached.
In my opinion Case 1 is not applicable to either the J or the Cw calculation. It should be case two for Cw with the following properties:
1) Transformed Concrete Width = physical concrete width.
2) Transformed Concrete Vertical Centroid Location = vertical location of centroid for physical concrete slab
For Cw, the thing that matters most is the lateral moment of inertia of the transformed slab/flange. And that's all about width as the width is the h in bh^2/12.
OP said:
However, for my last term in the equation where I am including the J term for the slab, is it correct to take the width as the slab thickness of 8" and the thickness as the transformed slab width of 3.87" as I have done?
While it's surely possible to come up with a transformed section for J, I doubt that it would be worth the trouble. It would be a different transformed section than you're using for Cw. I think that you'd be better off just adding in a bt^3/3 term to your total using the actual concrete dimensions and shear modulus. Moreover, you may want to reconsider using the J value of the concrete at all. If concrete cracks in torsion, it's torsional stiffness drops upwards of ten fold.
We've been talking about Cw but are you trying to come up with one transformed section for use with strong axis bending, weak axis bending, Cw, and J? If so, I'm not sure that's even possible.
I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.