Building Structures Modeling and Analysis Concepts by Dr G KUMARAN
Building Structures Modeling and Analysis Concepts by Dr G KUMARAN
,
Annamalai university
Building Structures
Modeling and Analysis Concepts
Overall Design Process
Conception
Modeling
Analysis
Design Integrated
Design
Detailing
Process
Drafting
Costing
Building Systems
Building is an assemblage of various Systems
Basic Functional System
Structural System
Plumbing and Drainage System
Electrical, Electronic and Communication System
Security System
Other specialized systems
The Building Structural System - Physical
Building Structure
Floor Diaphragm
Frame and Shear Walls
Lateral Load Resisting System Floor Slab System
Gravity Load Resisting System
STRUCTURE
EXCITATION RESPONSES
Displacements
Loads
Strains
Vibrations
Stress
Settlements pv
Stress Resultants
Thermal Changes
Analysis of Structures
xx yy zz
pvx 0
x y z
pv
Real Structure is governed by “Partial
Differential Equations” of various order
STRUCTURE
EXCITATION RESPONSES
Displacements
Loads
Strains
Vibrations
Stress
Settlements pv
Stress Resultants
Thermal Changes
Structural
Model
Finite Element Method: The Analysis Tool
Finite Element Analysis (FEA)
“A discretized solution to a continuum problem
using FEM”
Discretize Model in FE
Solve FE Model
Engineer
( Orthogonal dimensions)
Z
H, B much less than L
Regular Solid
Beam Element
X
( T small compared to Lengths )
Y Solid Element
Plate/ Shell
• Simple Supports
• Fix, Pin, Roller etc.
• Support Settlement
• Elastic Supports
• Spring to represent soil
• Using Modulus of Sub-grade
reaction
Engineering
Services
Building
Building Services
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Construction Eng.
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Value Eng. ftwa n
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En
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Aesthetics ee
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Ergonomics Eng.
Structural
Structural Eng. Construction
Engineering System Selection Artificial Intelligence
Knowledge Eng.
Economics eri
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Artificial Intelligence e ics
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Engineering
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Common Sense Ergo
Selection of Structural System
• Residential Buildings
– Apartments
– Hotels
– Dormitories
• Office and Commercial Buildings
• Mixed Occupancy – Commercial + Residential
• Industrial Buildings and Parking Garages
Typical Characteristic of Residential Bldg
B
Slab T = 200 mm
Beam Width, B = 300 mm
Beam Depth, D
a) 300 mm
b) 500 mm
c) 1000 mm
Moment Distribution in Beam-Slab
Effect of Beam Size on
Moment Distribution
Middle Strip
Design Strip
Column Strip
Middle Strip
Design Strip
Using Equivalent Frame Method – Design Strip
Design Strip
½ Middle Strip L2
Column Strip
½ Middle Strip
L2
Drop Panels
Longitudinal Beams
Transverse Beams
L1
Lateral Load Resisting Systems
Lateral Load Bearing Systems
Purpose
“ To Transfer Lateral Loads Applied at any location in the structure
down to the Foundation Level”
Single System
• Moment Resisting Frames
• Braced Frames
• Shear Walls
• Tubular Systems
• Outrigger System
Dual System
• Shear Wall + Frames
• Tube + Frame + Shear Wall
Lateral Load
1. 2D Frame Models
Convert building in to several 2D frames in each direction
Suitable for symmetrical loads and geometry
2. 3D Frame Model
Make a 3D frame model of entire building structure
Can be “open floor” model or “braced floor” model
3. Full 3D Finite Element Model
A full 3D Finite Element Model using plate and beam elements
4. Rigid Diaphragm Model
A special model suitable for buildings that uses the concept of Rigid
Floor Diaphragm
Modeling as 2D Frame
2. Select and
isolate Typical
2D Structure
4. Obtain results
Using Linked Frames
F1
Linked Elements
Shear Wall F2
F3
Modeling
Plan
F1 F2 F3
Link Element can allow only to transmit the shear and axial
force from one end to other end. It has moment
discontinuity at both ends
Link Element act as a member which links the forces of one
frame to another frame, representing the effect of Rigid Floor.
Typical Frame Elevation
Full 3D Finite Element Model
Basic Concept:
The building structure is represented by vertical units (2D Frames, 3D
Frames and Shear Walls), connected by the invisible rigid diaphragm
The lateral movement of all vertical units are connected to three master
degree of freedom
This takes into account the building rotation and its effect on the vertical
units.
The modeling and analysis is greatly simplified and made efficient
Rigid Floor Diaphragm Concept
Building d.o.f.’s
Y
F1 , 1
UL
rq UL3
rY
X UL2
rx
F3 , 3
UL1
F3 , 2
F2 , 1
ETABS meshes all floor type (horizontal) area objects (deck or slab) into the
analysis model
To mesh line objects with section properties use Edit menu > Divide Lines
To mesh area objects with section properties use Edit menu > Mesh Areas
Automatic Meshing
Automatic Meshing of Line Objects
Beam 2
Girder B
a) Floor Plan
Example showing how beams are automatically divided (meshed) where they
support other beams for the ETABS analysis model
Automatic Meshing of Area Objects
ETABS automatically meshes a floor-type area object up into four-sided
(quadrilateral) elements
Each side of each element of the mesh has a beam (Real or Imaginary) or wall
running along it
ETABS treats a wall like two columns and a beam where the columns are
located at the ends of the wall and the beam connects the columns.
The floor is broken up at all walls and all real and imaginary beams to create a
mesh of four-sided elements
Automatic Meshing of Area Objects
Girder A Girder A
Beam 2
Beam 2
Beam 1
Beam 3
Beam 1
Beam 3
Girder B Girder B
a) Floor Plan b) ETABS Imaginary Beams Shown Dashed c) ETABS Automatic Floor Meshing
This makes the automatic meshing for the analysis model cleaner, faster
and more predictable
There are four distinct types of load transformation in ETABS for out-of-plane
load transformation for floor-type area objects
With deck section properties
e4
e4
Edge 1 Edge 1
r
Ed g
Edg
Load transformation occurs after any
2
e
e
Edge 3 Edge 3
automatic meshing into the analysis
Edg
Edg
4 4
3 3
model a) Quadrilateral Element b) The r and s Axes
s (1, 1) s (1, 1)
ETABS normalizes the coordinates of (-1, 1) 1 (-1, 1) (r, s) 1
the four corner points of the area object 2 r 2
P r
4 4
3 (1, -1) 3 (1, -1)
The normalization is the key (-1, -1) (-1, -1)
It also determines which edges of the meshed shell elements are also edges
of the deck.
Load Transformation
Rectangular Interior Meshed Element with Uniform Load
Edge 4
Edge 2
Edge 4
Edge 2
tributary to that end point is c) Loading on Edges 2 and 4
Edge 2
Point load, P
point is lost, that is, it is P * x2
P * x2 P * x1 x1 + x2
ignored by ETABS
x1 + x2 x1 + x2
Edge 1
a) Rectangular Interior Element b) Distribution of Point Load d) Loading on Edge 4
of Meshed Floor
Load Transformation
Rectangular Interior Meshed Element with Line Load
The series of point loads is then converted back to a line load on the
surrounding beams
An area load that does not cover the entire element is also
transformed in a similar fashion to that for a point load using a
numerical integration technique.
Load Transformation
General Interior Meshed Element
3 3 3
Edge Edge Edge
Uniform load
2
Midpoint
4
Edge
Edge
Edge
Edge
Edge
Edge
Direction of deck span Midpoint
2
P2 P2 Line 2
4
4
Edge
Edge
3 3
Edge Edge
Edge
Edge
2
P1 P1
4
Edge
Edge
Line 1
Edge
Edge
Edge 1 Edge 1
Edge 1 Edge 1
a) General Interior Element of b)
Meshed Floor Deck d) e) Transformation of Uniform Load f) Loading on Edge 1
6'
4' 6' 14'
4'
0.6 klf
0.2 klf
2'
Beam 1
6'
e) Framed, unloaded opening
4'
1.5k 1.5k
2'
0.6 klf 0.6 klf
Beam 1 0.1 klf
Only applies to floor-type area objects with slab section properties that have
membrane behavior only
1 1
1 1
g) Real beam on one side h) Real beams on two i) Real beam on one side Tributary areas for various
plus one vertical adjacent sides plus plus two vertical
support element at one vertical support support elements at conditions of a membrane slab
corner point element at corner point corner points
4 3 3
Floors with Membrane Slab Properties
1 1
a) Full uniform load b) Partial uniform load
transformation transformation
3 3
3 3
4 4 2 2 4 4 2 2
1 1
1 1
c) Line load transformation d) Point load transformation
Type of Slab Systems in SAFE
The 5-Story Walkup Flats
A B C D E F G
6
5
6.0
6.0
3
2.8
2
2.8
1
2.8
1
3.0
3.0
3.0
3.0
3.5
2.0
6 5 4 3 2 1
Section
35 Story Office Building
5
7.0
8.0
8.0
7.0 Plan
Typical Floor
1
(B1, B2, 4-35)
6.0 6.0 8.0 8.0 6.0 6.0
A B C D E F G
35 Story Office Building
5
7.0
8.0
8.0
7.0 Plan
Floor 1-2
1
7.0
8.0
8.0
7.0 Plan
Floor 3
1
32 @ 3.5
2@
5.0
Section at 2 @ 2.8
C and D
5 4 3 2 1
35 Story Office Building
32 @ 3.5
2@
5.0
Section at 2 @ 2.8
B and E
5 4 3 2 1
35 Story Office Building
32 @ 3.5
2@
5.0
Section at 2 @ 2.8
A and G
5 4 3 2 1