Practical Application of The "General Method" of EN 1993-1-1
Practical Application of The "General Method" of EN 1993-1-1
Practical application of
the General Method of
EN 1993-1-1
In the second article of this series, Dr Jzsef Szalai of ConSteel Solutions demonstrates
practical examples where the General Method of EN 1993-1-1 shows advantages compared
to the conventional approaches.
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Design examples
Two simple examples are presented to examine the consequences of the two
main simplifications of the conventional stability design method: the isolation
of the structural member from the surrounding structure and the separation
of the flexural and lateral-torsional buckling modes.
Example 1: Influence of buckling mode separation
The first example, shown in Figure 1, is a simple column fixed at the bottom
and pinned at the top subjected to compression and bending. The column has
two intermediate (eccentric) supports to one of the flanges.
Advisory desk
Technical
supports
loading
N+M
elastic
critical
forces
cr= 2.05
Ncr= 1230 kN
Mcr= 307.5 kNm
pure N
pure M
Ncr= 2052 kN
Mcr = 712.5 kNm
buckling
shapes
Table 1
supports
loading
elastic
critical
forces
Ncr,x =
3192 kN
Ncr,z =
6306 kN
pure M
Mcr =
1647 kNm
pure N
Ncr,x =
9732 kN
pure M
Ncr,z =
6306 kN
Mcr=
2246 kNm
buckling
shapes
Table 2
the combined loading used in the general method and for the pure cases
(N; compression, M; bending). It can be seen that even the pure cases do not
belong to pure lateral and lateral-torsional buckling shapes so the appropriate
pure mode separation and accordingly the determination of the buckling
lengths are impossible.
In Table 2 the two modified support situations are illustrated. If concentric
lateral supports are assumed, a pure lateral buckling resistance can be
determined, but this is clearly a different buckling behaviour than under the
actual restraints. The intermediate lateral supports do not prevent the twist
of the member, with different buckling lengths for flexural and torsional
buckling, meaning conventional calculation of the elastic critical bending
moment is impossible. Also, the relevant mode (torsional) is not taken into
account in the interaction formula.
Example 2: Influence of structural member isolation
In this example the frame shown in Figure 2 is examined as a part of a
complete structure. The frame is haunched and has pinned bases, braced
at the corners and in the middle of the rafters and subjected to 6.75 kN/m
distributed vertical load on the rafters. The stability design of the right column
is presented. In Figure 3 the buckling of the frame is illustrated due to the
compression and bending moments in the members and the results of the
general method are shown calculated at the top section of the column.
It can be seen that according to the general method the column is slightly
inadequate (105.6%). The column resistance may be recalculated by the
conventional interaction method defined in EN 1993-1-1 6.3.3 using the Method
1 (Annex A) for the calculation of the interaction factors. The buckling lengths
for both the lateral and lateral-torsional buckling are taken as the system
length, assuming that this is a correct estimation. The final utilization
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105.6%
ult,k
1.522
0.750
cr,op
1.450
LT
0.624
op
1.025
NEd
-79.5 kN
0.340
My,Ed
-249.3 kNm
1.165
Mz,Ed
0.0 kNm
0.582
NRk
2 322.3 kN
LT
0.490
My,Rk
400.3 kNm
LT
1.047
Mz,Rk
61.9 kNm
0.400
M1
1.0
Figure 3: Buckling shape and the results of the general method for the column
Technical/Advisory Desk
Conclusions
This article presented some examples of the application of the general
method. It was demonstrated that if a more realistic modelling and structural
analysis is possible i.e. a general stability analysis then a more realistic and
natural way for the stability design is to use the general method. The examples
also showed the importance of an accurate assessment of the buckling shapes
and the associated elastic critical values which can lead to safer and in other
cases more economic structural design.
AD 358
Design thickness of cold formed
members and sheeting
According to BS EN 10143:2006, for nominal thicknesses between 1.6 mm
and 2.0 mm, for a width of strip between 100 mm and 1500 mm, the normal
tolerance is +/ 0.15 mm and the special tolerance is +/- 0.09 mm.
The core thickness is thus:
tcor = tnom tmetallic coatings = 1.80 0.04 = 1.76 mm
The purpose of this Advisory Desk Note is to highlight the existence of, and
explain the implications of, an important but often over-looked definition
in BS EN 1993-1-3:2006 the design thickness of cold formed members and
sheeting. It is crucial that designers use the correct design thickness for cold
formed members and sheeting because small differences between design and
nominal thicknesses can lead to significant differences in section properties
and design resistances.
The definition concerned is in clause 3.2.4 (3) of BS EN 1993-1-3. The
wording in the clause is slightly confused but it does provide two expressions
for the design thickness, depending on the specified tolerance on thickness.
If the negative tolerance on the material thickness, tol, (expressed as a
percentage of the nominal thickness) is less than or equal to 5%, expression
(3.3a) gives the design thickness as:
t = tcor
(3.3a)
where the core thickness, tcor = tnom tmetallic coatings , in which tnom is the nominal
material thickness and tmetallic coatings should be taken as the total coating
thickness on both faces.
However, if the negative tolerance, tol, is greater than 5% then the design
thickness is given by expression (3.3b) as:
t = tcor (100 tol) / 95
(3.3b)
(Note that the above expression corrects a typographic error in the published
Standard.)
The tolerances on dimensions and shape for continuously hot-dip coated
steel sheet and strip are given in BS EN 10143: 2006. There are two types of
thickness tolerance given in BS EN 10143 - normal and special. The actual
tolerance value is dependent on several factors such as the steel grade,
nominal material thickness and the width of the strip.
Where normal tolerances apply, the negative normal tolerance values
are generally greater than 5% of the nominal material thickness, meaning
that expression 3.3b should be used. Where special tolerances apply,
although the negative tolerance values are also greater than 5%, according
to BS EN 1993-1-3, 3.2.4 (4) the design thickness may be taken as the core
thickness, tcor , irrespective of the magnitude of that tolerance.
The designer therefore needs to know, in addition to the nominal thickness
and the coating thickness, whether normal or special tolerances will be
specified for coated steel to BS EN 10143. To illustrate the difference between
the two alternatives, consider the following example.
Example
Consider a cold formed member manufactured from S350 strip steel with a
nominal thickness of 1.8 mm and with a Z275 coating (for which the metallic
coating thickness is 0.04 mm).
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