gotlboys said:
It would really be helpful if you could expand a bit of your idea for me to understand the mechanic of such analysis.
I'll try. Under seismic load, your moment frame must eventually form a plastic mechanism. It can't do that unless a hinge is formed at the bottom of the columns. Otherwise, the mechanism would not be complete. If you don't provide the grade beam system, then your plastic hinges need to form at the footing level. And that means that, at minimum, your footings would need to resist the moment associated with the plastic hinge capacity of your columns.
On the other hand, if you provide a grade beam stiff enough to force the column hinges to form at the top of the grade beam rather than at the footing elevation, then those plastic hinge moments can be resisted by the grade beams instead of the footings. You'll still draw some bending to your footings even with the grade beams. It will be much less moment though and, most importantly, it won't be moment that you
need to resist with the footing.
The sketch below shows what I'm envisioning for your system. I've drawn your tie beams
very deep, like a basement wall. The shallower and less stiff your grade beam becomes, the less well the system will work to shield your footing from moments.
Like sandman, I'd also recommend perpendicular grade beams to help deal with that footing eccentricity. As it stands:
1) You'll struggle to make the grade beam/footing joint work and;
2) You may need to tie the slab on grade into the top of the grade beam to stabilize the sytem.
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.