1 / 37

Bijan O Aalami Emeritus Professor, San Francisco State University Principal, ADAPT Corporation

Design of Concrete Floors With Particular Reference to Post-Tensioning. Bijan O Aalami Emeritus Professor, San Francisco State University Principal, ADAPT Corporation. DESIGN STEPS Definition of geometry Support conditions Loading Design criteria (building codes) Structural Modeling

Download Presentation

Bijan O Aalami Emeritus Professor, San Francisco State University Principal, ADAPT Corporation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Design of Concrete Floors With Particular Reference to Post-Tensioning Bijan O Aalami Emeritus Professor, San Francisco State University Principal, ADAPT Corporation

  2. DESIGN STEPS • Definition of geometry • Support conditions • Loading • Design criteria (building codes) • Structural Modeling • Analysis (determine moments, shear, axial) • Determine reinforcement • Detailing

  3. Illustration of design concept for concrete floors through juxtaposition of its features with other materials: • Glass • Steel • Concrete • Post-Tensioned • Conventional

  4. Design the plate using the following materials: • Glass • Steel • Concrete PARTIAL PLAN A DESIGN REGION C FREE EDGE B PLATE SUPPORT

  5. MODELING OPTIONS OF A PLATE REGION A DESIGN REGION C FREE EDGE PLATE B SUPPORT (a) PARTIAL PLAN A A DETAILING TOP BARS C TOP BARS FOR DETAILING MAIN BOTTOM BARS MAIN TOP BARS B B (b) SPAN BETWEEN (c) CANTILEVER WALLS A AND B OVER WALL C

  6. FLEXURAL DUCTILITY OF PRESTRESSED SECTIONS F DUCTILITY = mFu/Fy M n M M MOMENT M REBAR PT F F y u (a) FLEXURAL DUCTILITY F e a c 20 d e PT m REBAR 15 DUCTILITY 10 05 CODE PERMISSIBLE RANGE 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 c/d e (b) DUCTILITY AND REINFORCEMENT

  7. ELASTIC AND DESIGN MOMENTS 2 M x M 1 y 1 2 (i) M ALONG 1-1 (ii) M ALONG 2-2 x y * (a) ELASTIC DISTRIBUTION OF MOMENTS 2 M x M y 1 1 2 (ii) M ALONG 2-2 (i) M ALONG 1-1 x y (b) DESIGN DISTRIBUTION OF MOMENTS * POISSON'S RATIO DISREGARDED

  8. FINITE ELEMENT MESHING SCHEMES FOR CONCRETE AND OTHER MATERIALS INTEGRAL-DRIVEN MESHING (CONCRETE) STRESS-DRIVEN MESHING (GLASS)

  9. STRESSES AND FORCE AT SECTIONS 1 Q A Q 1 1 1 (b) FEM MODEL (a) ACTUAL STRUCTURE 1 2P 3 P (c) ELEMENT A f 1 f 1 P 1 3 f 1 P P P a/2 F a/2 da f P F F = f a 1 fda = P (d) COMMON PROCEDURE (e) ALTERNATIVE PROCEDURE

  10. CONSTRUCTION DETAILING WALL SUPPORT SLAB REBAR BAR "SIZE; LENGTH; SPACING" (i) BAR DESIGNATION ON STRUCTURAL DRAWING BAR "SIZE; LENGTH" (ii) BAR DESIGNATION ON SHOP DRAWING (a) DETAILING OF PRIMARY REINFORCEMENT 6d D H A R d D d OVERLAP (i) (ii) (iii) (b) BAR BENDING AND SPLICING

  11. EXAMPLES OF "STRUCTURAL DETAILING" BOTTOM BARS CONCETRATED A LOAD BARS BELOW LOAD B (a) BARS FOR LOAD DISTRIBUTION SLAB EDGE AT RE-ENTRANT CORNER (b) CRACK CONTROL BARS

  12. Additional Features Specific to Post-tensioned Floors

  13. POST-TENSIONED DESIGN OPTION • Load Path (Tendon Layout) • Tendon Profile ? • Tendon Force ? TENDON 1 A SLAB C SLAB EDGE REBAR B 1 (a) PLAN TENDON REBAR WALL A WALL B (b) ELEVATION 1-1

  14. Question • For the same floor geometry, • For the same loading, • For the same designated load path, • Will two engineers conclude with the same design? No • Reason • Solution depends on the additional assumptions of • Tendon profile. • Tendon force.

  15. FLOW CHART FOR CONCRETE FLOOR DESIGN 1 CONCRETE OUTLINE AND SUPPORTS 2 DESIGN OPTIONAL PATH LOADING REQUIREMENTS (a) 3 STRUCTURAL STRUCTURAL SYSTEM AND MODELING LOAD PATH SELECTION (c) (b) ANALYSIS OPTION 5 6 4 FINITE SIMPLE EQUIVALENT ELEMENTS FRAME FRAME 7 CALCULATION OF REBAR FOR DESIGN SECTIONS DESIGN 8 STRUCTURAL DETAILING 9 CONSTRUCTION (SHOP DRAWINGS) DETAILING

  16. EXAMPLE OF A LOAD PATH DESIGNATION • Analysis using Equivalent Frame Method • Analysis using Finite Element Method

  17. PLAN OF FLOOR SLAB COLUMN SLAB OPENING WALL SLAB EDGE BEAM Y X

  18. DESIGNATION OF LINES OF SUPPORT IN X-DIRECTION A B Support line C D E F Y X G

  19. DESIGNATION OF LINES OF SUPPORT IN Y-DIRECTION 2 3 5 1 4 Y X

  20. SELECTION OF DEMARCATION POINTS FOR TRIBUTARIES (DESIGN STRIPS) 6 A 8 5 3 B 1 2 4 9 C 7 D E F Y X G

  21. TRIBUTARIES FOR DESIGN STRIPS IN X-DIRECTION 2 3 4 5 1 A B C D E F Y X G

  22. TRIBUTARIES FOR DESIGN STRIPS IN Y-DIRECTION 2 3 5 1 4 A B C D E F Y X

  23. DESIGN SECTIONS FOR DESIGN STRIPS B AND E DESIGN SECTION 2 3 5 4 1 A B C D E F Y X

  24. CONSTRUCTION OF DESIGN STRIP IN PLAN 1 2 3 4 5 0.8 9 10 10 9.2 B (a) DESIGN STRIP IN PROTOTYPE 0.8 9 10 10.6 10.5 B (b) STRAIGHTENED DESIGN STRIP IDEALIZED B ACTUAL (c) IDEALIZED TRIBUTARY FOR DESIGN

  25. DESIGN STRIP IN ELEVATION 1 2 3 4 5

  26. DISCRETIZATION OF FLOOR SLAB

  27. DIAGRAM OF LOAD FLOW UNDER SERVICE CONDITION Y X

  28. ZERO LINE OF SHEAR TRANSFER IN Y-DIRECTION A B C D E F Y G X

  29. ASSUMED DESIGN STRIPS SUPERIMPOSED ON NATURAL TRIBUTARIES IN X-DIRECTION 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -250 0 B B 0 0 0 0 -250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C C 250 0 0 250 -250 0 0 0 0 0 0 -250 -250 -250 0 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 -250 E 0 0 0 -250 0 0 -250 250 -250 250 250 0 250 0 F 0 Y 0 0 0 0 X 0 G 0 250

  30. PARTIAL VIEW OF IN-SERVICE MOMENTS My FOR DESIGN STRIP B OF PROSPERITY SLAB 2 1 A -12.1 kN 19.9 kN -15.2 kN 21.4 kN 4.88 kN B -281 kN-m -74.8 kN-m DESIGN STRIP 128 kN-m -83.2 kN + -8.61 kN -2.52 kN 3.99 kN 1.37 kN 6.86 kN Y X CONTOURS AT 20kN INTERVALS

  31. Thank you for your attention.

  32. Design_concept2 • - 11-30-00 reviewed • move the slides 31 through 35 to PT_des_tech • - Renee should look at the slides and improve them • 3-7-01 reviewed it looks ok

  33. Example of post-tensioned waffle slab during construction.

  34. WAFFLE SLAB MODELING OPTION COLUMN (a) ACTUAL SLAB B Y DESIGN STRIPS X B b b e e (b) DESIGN STRIPS IN X-DIRECTION ADP-728

  35. STRUCTURAL MODELING OF WAFFLE UNITS COLUMN CENTERLINE RIB ATTACHMENT (b ) w SOLID DIRECTION CAP/DROP b OF FRAME b w w (a) THREE WAFFLE SOLID SUPPORT CAP h h f DIRECTION c OF FRAME b B= b w e (b) IDEALIZED RIB ATTACHMENTS PARALLEL BEAM CAP/PANEL DIRECTION B OF FRAME TRANSVERSE BEAM b e (c) PLAN OF IDEALIZED STRUCTURAL MODEL ADP-726

  36. CROSS-SECTION OF A WAFFLE SLAB c = b f b f h h f 12 1 b BASIC w STRUCTURAL UNIT DESI-122

  37. Concluding Remarks: • Load path designation is an integral part of floor design • Structural detailing is essential for satisfactory performance

More Related