Design of Columns and Beam-Columns in Timber
Column failures Material failure (crushing) Elastic buckling (Euler) Inelastic buckling (combination of buckling and material failure) P P Δ L eff
Truss compression members Fraser Bridge, Quesnel
Column behaviour Displacement Δ (mm) Axial load P (kN) P cr P P Δ Perfectly straight and elastic column Crooked elastic column Crooked column with material failure L eff
Pin-ended struts Shadbolt Centre, Burnaby
Column design equation P r = F c A K Zc K C where = 0.8 and F c = f c (K D K H K Sc K T ) size factor K Zc = 6.3 (dL) ≤ 1.3 d L axis of buckling P
Glulam arches and cross-bracing UNBC, Prince George, BC
Capacity of a column LeLe PrPr combination of material failure and buckling elastic buckling material failure FcA FcA π 2 EI/L 2 (Euler equation)
Pin-ended columns in restroom building North Cascades Highway, WA Actual pin connections Non-prismatic round columns
Column buckling factor K C C C = L e /d KCKC limit 0.15
What is an acceptable l/d ratio ?? Clustered columns Forest Sciences Centre, UBC L/d ration of individual columns ~ 30
Effective length L eff = length of half sine-wave = k L k (theory) > 1 k (design) > 1 non-sway sway* P PP PP P PPPP LeLe LeLe LeLe LeLe * Sway cases should be treated with frame stability approach
Glulam and steel trusses Velodrome, Bordeaux, France All end connections are assumed to be pin-ended
Pin connected column base Note: water damage
Column base: fixed or pin connected ??
Effective length L ex L ey
Round poles in a marine structure
Partially braced columns in a post- and-beam structure FERIC Building, Vancouver, BC
L/d ratios LeLe L ey L ex d dydy dxdx x x y y y y
Stud wall axis of buckling d L ignore sheathing contribution when calculating stud wall resistance
Stud wall construction
Fixed or pinned connection ? Note: bearing block from hard wood
An interesting connection between column and truss (combined steel and glulam truss)
Slightly over-designed truss member (Architectural features)
Effective length (sway cases) L eff = length of half sine-wave = k L k (theory) <k<2.0 k (design) P PP PP P PPPP Note: Sway cases should only be designed this way when all the columns are equally loaded and all columns contribute equally to the lateral sway resistance of a building LeLe LeLe LeLe LeLe
Sway frame for a small covered road bridge
Sway permitted columns ….or aren’t they ??
Haunched columns UNBC, Prince George, BC
Frame stability Columns carry axial forces from gravity loads Effective length based on sway-prevented case Sway effects included in applied moments –When no applied moments, assume frame to be out- of-plumb by 0.5% drift –Applied horizontal forces (wind, earthquake) get amplified Design as beam-column
Frame stability (P- Δ effects) Δ H W Δ = 1 st order displacement H total = H = amplification factor H = applied hor. load h Note: This column does not contribute to the stability of the frame
Sway frame for a small covered road bridge Haunched frame in longitudinal direction Minimal bracing, combined with roof diaphragm in lateral direction
Combined stresses Bi-axial bending Bending and compression
Heavy timber trusses Abbotsford arena
Roundhouse Lodge, Whistler Mountain
neutral axis f max = f a + f bx + f by < f des ( P f / A ) + ( M fx / S x ) + ( M fy / S y ) < f des (P f / A f des ) + (M fx / S x f des ) + (M fy / S y f des ) < 1.0 (P f / P r ) + (M fx / M r ) + ( M fy / M r ) < 1.0 x x f bx = M fx / S x M fx y y f by = M fy / S y M fy The only fly in the pie is that f des is not the same for the three cases f a = P f / A PfPf
Moment amplification ΔoΔo Δ max P P P E = Euler load
Interaction equation Axial load Bending about y-axis Bending about x-axis
3 storey walk-up (woodframe construction)
New Forestry Building, UBC, Vancouver
Stud wall construction
sill plate d L studs top plate wall plate joists check compression perp. wall and top plate help to distribute loads into studs