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Limit State Method

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Dr S R Satish Kumar, IIT Madras. 1. Limit State Method. Dr S R ... Field Fabrications. Shop Fabrications. Resistance of connection. m1 Bolts-Friction Type ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Limit State Method


1
Limit State Method
2
INTRODUCTION
  • Designer has to ensure the structures, he
  • designs are
  • Fit for their purpose
  • Safe
  • Economical and durable

3
INTRODUCTION
  • Following Uncertainties affect the safety of a
    structure
  • about loading
  • about material strength and
  • about structural dimensions
  • about behaviour under load

4
LIMIT STATE DESIGN
  • Limit State State at which one of the conditions
    pertaining to the structure has
    reached a limiting value
  • Limit States
  • Limit States of Strength Limit States
    of Serviceability
  • Strength as governed by material Deflection
  • Buckling strength Vibration
  • Stability against overturning, sway Fatigue
    cracks (reparable damage)
  • Fatigue Fracture Corrosion
  • Brittle Fracture Fire resistance

5
RANDOM VARIATIONS

6
LIMIT STATES DESIGN
  • Basis of Limit States Design

Fig. 1 Probability distribution of the safety
margin R-Q
7
PROBABILITY OF FAILURE
8
SAFETY INDEX
Pf ? - ?
? 2.32 3.09 3.72 4.27 4.75 5.2 5.61
Pf ? (-?) 10-2 10-3 10-4 10-5 10-6 10-7 10-8
9
PARTIAL SAFETY FACTOR

10
ALLOWABLE STRESS DESIGN (ASD)
  • Stresses caused by the characteristic loads must
    be less than an allowable stress, which is a
    fraction of the yield strength
  • Allowable stress may be defined in terms of a
    factor of safety" which represents a margin for
    overload and other unknown factors which could be
    tolerated by the structure

11
ALLOWABLE SRESS DESIGN (ASD)
  • Allowable stress (Yield stress) / (Factor of
    safety)
  • Limitations
  • Material non-linearity
  • Non-linear behaviour in the postbuckled state and
    the property of steel to tolerate high stresses
    by yielding locally and redistributing the loads
    not accounted for.
  • No allowance for redistribution of loads in
    statically indeterminate members

12
LIMIT STATES DESIGN
  • Limit States" are various conditions in which a
    structure would be considered to have failed to
    fulfil the purpose for which it was built.
  • Ultimate Limit States are those catastrophic
    states,which require a larger reliability in
    order to reduce the probability of its occurrence
    to a very low level.
  • Serviceability Limit State" refers to the limits
    on acceptable performance of the structure during
    service.

13
General Principles of Limit States Design
  • Structure to be designed for the Limit States at
    which they would become unfit for their intended
    purpose by choosing, appropriate partial safety
    factors, based on probabilistic methods.
  • Two partial safety factors, one applied to
    loading (?f) and another to the material strength
    (?m) shall be employed.

14
  • ?f allows for
  • Possible deviation of the actual behaviour of the
    structure from the analysis model
  • Deviation of loads from specified values and
  • Reduced probability that the various loads acting
    together will simultaneously reach the
    characteristic value.

15
LIMIT STATES DESIGN
  • ?m takes account
  • Possible deviation of the material in the
    structure from that assumed in design
  • Possible reduction in the strength of the
    material from its characteristic value
  • Manufacturing tolerances.
  • Mode of failure (ductile or brittle)

16
IS800 SECTION 5 LIMIT STATE DESIGN
  • 5.1 Basis for Design
  • 5.2 Limit State Design
  • 5.3 Actions
  • 5.4 Strength
  • 5.5 Factors Governing the Ultimate Strength
  • 5.5.1 Stability
  • 5.5.2 Fatigue
  • 5.5.3 Plastic Collapse
  • 5.6 Limit State of Serviceability
  • 5.6.1 Deflection
  • 5.6.2 Vibration
  • 5.6.3 Durability
  • 5.6.4 Fire Resistance

17
5.1 Basis for Design
  • the structure shall be designed to withstand
    safely all loads likely to act on it throughout
    its life.
  • It shall also satisfy the serviceability
    requirements, such as limitations of deflection
    and vibration.
  • It shall not suffer total collapse under
    accidental loads such as from explosions or
    impact or due to consequences of human error to
    an extent beyond the local damages.
  • The objective of design is to achieve a structure
    that will remain fit for use during its life with
    an acceptable target reliability.

18
5.1.3
  • The potential for catastrophic damage shall be
    limited or avoided by appropriate choice of one
    or more of the following
  • i) avoiding, eliminating or reducing exposure to
    hazards, which the structure is likely to
    sustain.
  • ii) choosing structural forms, layouts and
    details and designing such that
  • the structure has low sensitivity to hazardous
    conditions.
  • the structure survives with only local damage
    even after serious damage to any one individual
    element by the hazard.

19
Conditions to be satisfied to avoid a
disproportionate collapse
  • building should be effectively tied together at
    each principal floor level and each column should
    be effectively held in position by means of
    continuous ties (beams) nearly orthogonal
  • each storey of the building should be checked to
    ensure disproportionate collapse would not
    precipitate by the notional removal, one at a
    time, of each column.
  • check should be made at each storey by removing
    one lateral support system at a time to ensure
    disproportionate collapse would not occur.

20
Actions
  • 5.3.1 Classification of Actions ?
  • by their variation with time as given below
  • a) Permanent Actions (Qp) Actions due to
    self-weight of structural and non-structural
    components, fittings, ancillaries, and fixed
    equipment etc.
  • b) Variable Actions (Qv) Actions due to
    construction and service stage loads such as
    imposed (live) loads (crane loads, snow loads
    etc.), wind loads, and earthquake loads etc.
  • c) Accidental Actions (Qa) Actions due to
    explosions, impact of vehicles, and fires etc.

21
Partial Safety Factors (Actions)
Combina tion Limit State of Strength Limit State of Strength Limit State of Strength Limit State of Strength Limit State of Strength Limit state of Serviceability Limit state of Serviceability Limit state of Serviceability Limit state of Serviceability
Combina tion DL LL LL WL/ EL AL DL LL LL WL/EL
Combina tion DL Lead ing Accompa Nying WL/ EL AL DL Leading Accompanying WL/EL
DLLLCL 1.5 1.5 1.05 ? ? 1.0 1.0 1.0 ?
DLLLCL WL/EL 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.05 0.53 0.6 1.2 ? 1.0 0.8 0.8 0.8
DLWL/EL 1.5 (0.9) ? ? 1.5 ? 1.0 ? ? 1.0
DLER 1.2 (0.9) 1.2 ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
DLLLAL 1.0 0.35 0.35 ? 1.0 ? ? ? ?
22
PARTIAL SAFETY FACTORS (Strength)
Sl. No Definition Partial Safety Factor Partial Safety Factor
1 Resistance, governed by yielding ?mo 1.1 1.1
2 Resistance of member to buckling ?mo 1.1 1.1
3 Resistance, governed by ultimate stress ?m1 1.25 1.25
4 Resistance of connection ?m1 Bolts-Friction Type Bolts-Bearing Type Rivets Welds Shop Fabrications Field Fabrications
4 Resistance of connection ?m1 Bolts-Friction Type Bolts-Bearing Type Rivets Welds 1.25 1.25 1.25 1.25 1.25 1.25 1.25 1.50
23
5.5 Factors Governing the Ultimate Strength
  • frame stability against overturning and sway
  • Fatigue design shall be as per Section 13 of this
    code. When designing for fatigue, the load
    factor for action, ?f, equal to unity shall be
    used for the load causing stress fluctuation and
    stress range.
  • Plastic Collapse ? Plastic analysis and design
    may be used if the requirement specified under
    the plastic method of analysis (Section 4.5) are
    satisfied.

24
5.6 Limit State of Serviceability
  • Deflections are to be checked for the most
    adverse but realistic combination of service
    loads and their arrangement, by elastic analysis,
    using a load factor of 1.0
  • Suitable provisions in the design shall be made
    for the dynamic effects of live loads, impact
    loads and vibration/fatigue due to machinery
    operating loads.
  • The durability of steel structures shall be
    ensured by following recommendations of Section
    15.
  • Design provisions to resist fire are briefly
    discussed in Section 16.

25
LIMITING DEFLECTIONS under LL Only
Type of building Deflection Design Load Member Supporting Maximum Deflection
Indus trial building Vertical Live load/Wind load Purlins and Girts Purlins and Girts Elastic cladding Brittle cladding Span / 150 Span / 180
Indus trial building Vertical Live load Simple span Elastic cladding Span / 240
Indus trial building Vertical Live load Simple span Brittle cladding Span / 300
Indus trial building Vertical Live load Cantilever span Elastic cladding Span / 120
Indus trial building Vertical Live load Cantilever span Brittle cladding Span / 150
Indus trial building Vertical Live load or Wind load Rafter supporting Profiled Metal Sheeting Span / 180
Indus trial building Vertical Live load or Wind load Rafter supporting Plastered Sheeting Span / 240
Indus trial building Vertical Crane load (Manual operation) Gantry Crane Span / 500
Indus trial building Vertical
Indus trial building Vertical Crane load (Electric operation over 50 t) Gantry Crane Span / 1000
26
DEFLECTION LIMITS under LL Only
Deflection Design Load Member Supporting Maximum Deflection
Lateral Crane wind No cranes Column Elastic cladding Height / 150
Lateral Crane wind No cranes Column Masonry/brittle cladding Height / 240
Lateral Crane wind Crane Gantry (lateral) Crane Span / 400
Lateral Crane wind
Vertical Live load Floors roofs Not susceptible to cracking Span / 300
Vertical Live load Floor Roof Susceptible to cracking Span / 360
Lateral Wind Building --- Height / 500
Lateral Wind Inter storey drift --- Storey height / 300
27
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