Torsion
Torsion
Torsion
introduction
• A moment acting about a
longitudinal axis of the
member is called a torque,
twisting moment or torsional
moment, T.
• Torsion may arise as the
result of:
(a) Primary or equilibrium
torsion: occurs when the
external load has no
alternative to being resisted
but by torsion. Examples:
curved girders and the
three structures shown in
Figure.
introduction
• secondary or compatibility torsion:
in statically indeterminate
structures from the requirements
of continuity. Neglecting this
torsion will not cause problems
because: (1) the shear and
moment capacities of the beam
are not reduced by small amounts
of torque, and (2) the stressing of
adjacent members as the beam
twists permit a redistribution of
forces to these members and
reduces the torque that must be
supported by the beam.
Examples of torsion
T r
max =
J
Behavior of rectangular sections
Such sections do not fall under the assumptions stated before.
They warp when a torque is applied and radii don't stay straight.
As a result axial as well as circumferential shearing stresses are
generated. For a rectangular member, the corner elements do
not distort at all (corners=0) and the maximum shear stresses
occur at the midpoints of the long sides as shown in Figure.
These complications plus the fact that reinforced
concrete sections are neither homogeneous nor
isotropic make it difficult to develop exact
mathematical formulations based on the physical
models.
•
Behavior of rectangular sections
• From the mathematical theory of elasticity the magnitude of
the maximum shear stress , at midpoint of the long side, due
to a torque T as a function of the ratio y to x (long to short
sides) is given by
T
max =
x 2y
• Where α varies from 0.208 for y/x=1 (square bar) to 0.333 for
y/x= (infinity wide plate)
Hollow members
• Consider a thin-wall tube subjected to a torsion T as shown in
Fig. 8.5. If the thickness of the tube is not constant and varies
along the perimeters of the tube, then equilibrium of an
element like that shown in Figure b requires:
V AB =V CD 1 t 1 dx = 2 t 2 dx 1 t 1 = 2 t 2 q
T = P rqdx
but rds = twice the area of the shaded
triangle, then
q T
T = 2q A o =
t 2Ao t
where Ao is the area enclosed by the middle of the wall of the tube.
From the above equation max occurs where t is the least.
Examples
• Read example 7.1 in textbook
• Example 2: compute the shear stress, , at the wall and at the
lower flange in the section shown below, due to an applied
torque of 1000kN.m.
Principal stresses due
to torsion
Principal tensile stresses eventually cause
cracking that spirals around the body, as
Shown by the line A-B-C-D-E
In reinforced concrete such a crack would
Cause failure unless it was crossed by
reinforcement. This generally takes the form
of longitudinal bars in the corners and closed
stirrups.
Principal stresses due to
torsion and shear
The two shear stresses components add on one
side face (front side) and counteract each other
on the other. As the result inclined cracking
starts on AB and extends across the flexural
tensile face. If bending moments are large, the
cracks will extend almost vertically across the
back face. The flexural compression zone near
the bottom prevents the cracks from extending
full height.
Behavior of RC members subjected to torsion
When a concrete member is loaded in
pure torsion, shear stresses develop.
One or more cracks (inclined) develop
when the maximum principal tensile
stress reaches the tensile strength
of concrete. The onset of cracking
causes failure of an unreinforced
Member. Furthermore the addition of longitudinal steel without
stirrups has little effect on the strength of a beam loaded in pure
torsion because it is effective only in resisting the longitudinal
component of the diagonal tension forces.
A rectangular beam with longitudinal bars in the corners and closed
stirrups can resist increased load after cracking as shown in figure.
Behavior of RC members subjected to torsion
Tc 2 V c 2
( ) ( ) =1
T cu V cu
Where Vcu =inclined cracking shear in the absence of torque.
Tcu = the cracking torque in the absence of shear.
Space Truss Analogy
Theory
Assumptions:
1. Both solid and hollow members
are considered as tubes.
2. After cracking the tube is
idealized as a hollow truss
consisting of closed stirrups,
longitudinal bars in the corners,
and compression diagonals
approximately centered on the
stirrups. The diagonals are
idealized as being between the
cracks that are at angle , generally
taken as 45 degrees for RC.
q T
=
The cracking pure torsion t 2Ao t
Knowing that the principal tensile stress equal to the shear stress for
elements subjected to pure shear, thus the concrete will crack when
the shear stress equal to the tensile capacity of cross section. If we
use conservatively 0.333√fc as tensile strength of concrete in biaxial
tension-compression, and remembering that Ao must be some
fraction of the area enclosed by the outside perimeter of the full
concrete cross section Acp. Also, the value of t can, in general, be
approximated as a fraction of the ratio Acp/Pcp, where Pcp is the
perimeter of the cross section. Then, assuming a value of Ao
approximately equal to 2 Acp /3, and a value of t=3 Acp/4Pcp. Using
these values in Eq. above yields:
f c A 2cp
Note: tensile strength under biaxial T cr =
3 pcp
compression And tension is less than in uniaxial tension (≈0.67).
Tc 2 V c 2
The cracking torsion ( ) ( ) =1
T cu V cu
In combined shear and torsion, if T=0.25Tcr , the reduction in the
inclined cracking shear is:
Vc 0.25T cr 2
( ) = 1 ( ) 0.97
V cu T cr
This was deemed to be negligible.
The threshold torsion below which torsion can be ignored in a solid
cross section is: f c A 2cp
T cr =
12 pcp
For isolated beam, Acp is the area enclosed by the perimeter of the
section including the area of any holes. Pcp is the perimeter of the
section. For a beam cast monolithically with
the floor slab, ACI 11.5.1 defines the
overhanging flange width to be included in
the calculation of Acp and Pcp as shown
The cracking torsion
Note: a lower limit (one fourth of derived) is placed for finding Tcr
in the previous equation for conservative purposes to deal with
equilibrium torsion. The derived value is permitted according to
ACI code for compatibility torsion.
T n T i V y (x o /2) V x ( y o/2)
Atf yo
V 2 = A t f yt n
yt
cot
s
Area of stirrups for torsion
Where: At = area of one stirrup leg of a closed stirrup.
f yt = yield strength of transverse reinforcement
s = stirrup spacing.
Combining previous two
2 A t f yv x o y o
equations gives:
T n = cot
s
It has been found experimentally that, after cracking, the effective
area enclosed by the shear flow path is somewhat less than the value
of xo yo =Aoh , instead ACI recommends using 0.85 Aoh with Ao
substituted for Aoh. The value may be taken between 30-60 degrees.
ACI 11.5.3.6 suggests that may be taken as 45 degrees, because this
corresponds to the angle assumed in the derivation of the equation
for designing stirrups for shear.
Torsional longitudinal
reinforcement
The longitudinal reinforcement
Al must be proportioned to
resist the longitudinal tension forces that occur in the space truss.
A t f yt y o
N 2 V 2 cot cot 2
s
4
A t f yt p h
N N i
A t f yt
2(x o y o ) cot
2
cot 2 A l f y
i 1 s s
A t f yt p h
Al cot 2
sf y
Tn A t f yt p h T p
or A l cot 2 n h cot
2Ao At f yt cot / s s f y 2Ao f y
Tu Tu / p h
Ao 0.85Aoh ,T n Al cot
1.7Aoh f y
Combined shear and torsion
Vn = Vc + Vs
Tn = Ts
Maximum shear and torsion
A serviceability failure may occur if the inclined cracks are too wide
at service loads. The limit on combined shear and torsion in ACI
11.5.3.1 was derived to limit the service-load crack widths.
For a hollow section as shown in Figure the two stresses add at A
and yield: Vu Tu p h
vu =
bw d 1.7 A 2oh
For a member with a soild section, experimental results shows that
above equation is overconservative, a better representation is given
by: V T p
vu = ( u
)2 ( u 2h )2
bw d 1.7A oh
The combined shear stress due
to shear force and torsional
moment is limited to the same
criterion for shear capacity as explained in Chapter 6.
Combined moment and torsion
A v 2A t 0.062 f c b w s/ f yt , or (0.35b w s/ f yt )
5 f c Acp At f At 0.175bw
A l ,min ph ,
yt
12f y s f y s f yt
Satisfy the spacing (should not exceed 30cm), and bar size
requirements (the diameter of longitudinal bar may not be less than
s/24 or 10mm). Torsion reinforcement must be symmetrically
distributed around all cross section and that part which needs to be
placed where As is needed must be added to As found in step 1.
Torsion reinforcement must be extended at least a distance d+bt
beyond the section where 2
fc A
Tu cp
12 pcp
Additional remarks
1. Fy 420MPa to limit crack widths ACI 11.5.3.4
2. The transverse stirrup used for torsional reinforcement must
be of a closed form. The concrete outside the reinforcing cage is
not well anchored, and the shaded region will spall off if the
compression in the outer shell is large as shown in figure:
Additional remarks
Thus ACI 11.5.4.2 (a) requires
that stirrups or ties must be
anchored with a 135o hooks
around longitudinal bars if
the corner can spall. ACI
11.5.4.2 (b) allows the use of
a 90 degrees standard hook
if the concrete surrounding
the anchorage is restrained
against spalling by a flange or
a slab.
Additional remarks
3. If flanges are included in the computation of torsional strength
for T and L-shaped beams, closed torsional stirrups must be
provided in the flanges as shown in Figure.
Example 7.2
A cantilever beam 1.35m long supports its own dead load plus a
concentrated load located 0.15m from the end of the beam and
0.15m away from the centroidal axis of the beam as shown. The
beam supports its own dead load plus an unfactored
concentrated load which is 90kN dead load and 90kN live load.
Design reinforcement for flexure,
shear, and torsion.
Use fy = 420MPa for all steel
and f’c = 21MPa.
Example 7.3
Redesign the beam in the previous example using a hollow cross
section. Try the section shown in figure below.
Example 7.4
The one-way joist system
shown in figure supports
A 16kN/m total factored load
applied directly to beam AB
including beam own weight.
The factored load on the slab
is 15kN/m2.
Design the end span AB of the exterior spandrel beam on grid line
1. Use fy = 420MPa for all steel and f’c = 28MPa.
Homework 1
1. A cantilever beam 2.4m long and 450mm wide supports its
own dead load plus a concentrated load located 150mm from
the end of the beam and 115mm away from the vertical axis of
the beam. The concentrated load is 67kN dead load and 90kN
live load. Design reinforcement for flexure, shear, and torsion.
Use fy = 420MPa for all steel and f’c = 26MPa.
2. Given the floor system shown in Fig. P7-3. f’c =315MPa, fy =
420MPa for the longitudinal steel and fy = 280MPa for the
transverse steel :
a) Design the spandrel beam between columns A1 and B1 for
bending, shear, and torsion. Check all of the appropriate ACI
Code requirements for strength, minimum reinforcement area,
and reinforcement spacing are satisfied.
(b) Design the spandrel
beam between columns
A1 and A2 for bending,
shear, and torsion.
Check that all of the
appropriate ACI Code
requirements for
strength, minimum
reinforcement area, and
reinforcement spacing
are satisfied.
•