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Plain & reinforced concrete - II
Lesson no 02: Design Methodology
Dr. Hammad Anis Khan
Design Process Types of loads 1. Self Weight 2. Dead Load 3. Live Load 4. Wind Load 5. Snow Load 6. Earthquake Load (Environmental Loads) 7. Earth retaining Load 8. Soil Retaining Load Dead Load • Load whose magnitude and position do not change with time • Major part is the weight of the structure • Include both Load bearing elements (slabs, beam etc) and non load bearing elements (floor fill, finish floor, suspended loads, piping etc) • Generally can be estimated with reasonable certainty Dead Load • Dead Load = Volume of the member x unit weight • Density (unit weight) of different materials: Live Load • Load whose magnitude and position can change with time • Occupancy loads in buildings • Traffic loads on bridges • Minimum live loads are usually specified in the building code • Representative values are given in Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures, SEI/ASCE 7-02, American Society of Civil Engineers Live Load • The calculations mainly depend upon past experience and probability studies Working Stress Design • ACI: Alternate Design Method Strength Design Method • ACI: Ultimate Strength Design Factored Load Combinations
• D = Dead Load, L = Live Load, H = Lateral Earth Pressure,
Lr= Roof Live Load, S = Snow Load, R = Rain Load, W = Wind Load, E = Earthquake Load Strength Reduction Factors Advantages of Strength Design Method • Economical when Dead Load is larger in proportion • Safe design when Live Load is greater • We can observe all the collapse mechanism Disadvantages of WSD • Does not take into account the variability of resistance and loads • Lack of knowledge of factor of safety • Inability to deal with groups of loads when one load increases at a rate different from that of the others