ugoveri
Structural
- Feb 6, 2003
- 13
I am using SAP2000 10.0.1, but have tryed versions 10.0.7 and a beta version of SAP2000 v11...
I tried to model a very simple square slab, working as a one way slab, and so having supports only on two parallel sides
The dimensions are not relevant...
I tried 2 situations:
- simply supported (lets call solution 1)
- with full bendind restrain in both sides... (solution 2)
For each of those I tried:
- a regular thin-shell with the concrete shell design option (solution ".a");
- the new layered shell option (solution ".b");
A very strange thing happened...
While for the models 1.a and 1.b the results where both similar around p.L^2/8 (being p the load, and L the span), for the models 2.a and 2.b the results where quite different...
For the model 2.a the result as expected was around p.L^2/12 at the supports and p.L^2/24 at the span.
For the model 2.b the result was around p.L^2/24 at the span, but more or less 67% of p.L^2/12 at the support...
How can one trust such a result... Everybody knows that if you use a thick-shell model (which takes account for shear deformation energy, Mindlin model) the results come slightly different from those using kirchoff theory of thin plates... But that difference is related to the relative distribution of the stresses, but the overall difference between the support and the span has to be around (p.L^2/8)...
And with the layered shell model it wasn't... It was a terrifying discovery...
Of course, besides this, the reinforcement is well calculated... But having a wrong force distribution as base...
So be carefull with your models... If you use the regular concrete design for slabs, you are assuming some king of simplification - the force in the steel is calculated by:
- Fbottom = + M/z + N/2
- Ftop = + M/z + N/2,
assuming M as positive and being:
- z = h - h1 - h2;
- h the overall depth of the slab;
- h1 e h2 - the distance from top or bottom of the slab to the bottom or top reinforcement centers;
It gives probably a slightly bigger area of reinforcement as it should but for thin shells it gives more or less good results, and even because it is calculated based with the right forces...
If you use the layered shell model, the results are supposed to be correct in what concerns to reinforcement area, but because they are based on a stress distribution which isn't correct it should not be trusted...
Would be great if someone would pass this information to CSI... I tried to send several information in the past, but it seems you are speaking to a wall
I tried to model a very simple square slab, working as a one way slab, and so having supports only on two parallel sides
The dimensions are not relevant...
I tried 2 situations:
- simply supported (lets call solution 1)
- with full bendind restrain in both sides... (solution 2)
For each of those I tried:
- a regular thin-shell with the concrete shell design option (solution ".a");
- the new layered shell option (solution ".b");
A very strange thing happened...
While for the models 1.a and 1.b the results where both similar around p.L^2/8 (being p the load, and L the span), for the models 2.a and 2.b the results where quite different...
For the model 2.a the result as expected was around p.L^2/12 at the supports and p.L^2/24 at the span.
For the model 2.b the result was around p.L^2/24 at the span, but more or less 67% of p.L^2/12 at the support...
How can one trust such a result... Everybody knows that if you use a thick-shell model (which takes account for shear deformation energy, Mindlin model) the results come slightly different from those using kirchoff theory of thin plates... But that difference is related to the relative distribution of the stresses, but the overall difference between the support and the span has to be around (p.L^2/8)...
And with the layered shell model it wasn't... It was a terrifying discovery...
Of course, besides this, the reinforcement is well calculated... But having a wrong force distribution as base...
So be carefull with your models... If you use the regular concrete design for slabs, you are assuming some king of simplification - the force in the steel is calculated by:
- Fbottom = + M/z + N/2
- Ftop = + M/z + N/2,
assuming M as positive and being:
- z = h - h1 - h2;
- h the overall depth of the slab;
- h1 e h2 - the distance from top or bottom of the slab to the bottom or top reinforcement centers;
It gives probably a slightly bigger area of reinforcement as it should but for thin shells it gives more or less good results, and even because it is calculated based with the right forces...
If you use the layered shell model, the results are supposed to be correct in what concerns to reinforcement area, but because they are based on a stress distribution which isn't correct it should not be trusted...
Would be great if someone would pass this information to CSI... I tried to send several information in the past, but it seems you are speaking to a wall