Chapter 4 Short Column Analysis and Design
Chapter 4 Short Column Analysis and Design
CVLE471
REINFORCED CONCRETE
DESIGN:
Column Analysis and Design
Introduction
• The main vertical load-carrying members in buildings are called columns.
• The ACI Code defines a column as a member used primarily to support axial compressive loads and
with a height at least three times its least lateral dimension.
• The code definition for columns will be extended to include members subjected to combined axial
compression and bending moment (in other words, eccentrically applied compressive loads),
because, for all practical purposes, no column is truly axially loaded.
• The three basic types of reinforced concrete columns are shown in Figure below:
• Tied columns are generally square, rectangular or circular, whereas spiral columns are normally
circular.
• This is not a hard-and-fast rule, however, as square, spirally reinforced columns, and circular tied
columns do exist, as do other shapes, such as octagonal and L-shaped columns.
• We initially discuss the analysis and design of columns that are short.
• A column is said to be short when its length is such that lateral buckling need not be considered.
• It is recognized that as length increases, the usable strength of a given cross section is decreased
because of the buckling problem.
• By their very nature, concrete columns are more massive and therefore stiffer than their structural
steel counterparts.
• For this reason, slenderness is less of a problem in reinforced concrete columns.
• It has been estimated that more than 90% of typical reinforced concrete columns existing in braced
frame buildings may be classified as short columns, and slenderness effects may be neglected.
• For convenience, we will use the following longitudinal steel reinforcement ratio:
ρg = ratio of total longitudinal reinforcement area to cross-sectional area of column
(Ast/Ag)
• The nominal, or theoretical, axial load strength for the special case of zero eccentricity may be
written as:
• This theoretical strength must be further reduced to a maximum usable axial load strength using two
different strength reduction factors.
• The code directs that the basic load–strength relationship be:
• where Pn is the nominal axial load strength at a given eccentricity and ΦPn is designated as the
design axial load strength. Logically, for the case of zero eccentricity, if it could exist, Pn would
equal P0.
• The ACI Code recognizes that no practical column can be loaded with zero eccentricity, however.
• Therefore, in addition to imposing the strength reduction factor Φ, the code directs that the nominal
strengths be further reduced by factors of 0.80 and 0.85 for tied and spiral columns, respectively.
• This results in the following expressions for usable axial load strengths.
150mm 150mm
150mm 150mm
• The minimum spiral size is 10 mm diameter for cast-in-place construction (16 mm. is usually
maximum).
• Clear space between spirals must not exceed 75 mm. or be less than 25 mm.
• The spiral steel ratio ρs must not be less than the value given by:
where
ρs =volume of spiral steel in one turn / volume of column core in height
s = center-to-center spacing of spiral (mm) (sometimes called the pitch)
Ag = gross cross-sectional area of the column (mm2)
Ach = cross-sectional area of the core (mm2) (out-to-out of spiral)
fyt = spiral steel yield point (Mpa)
f'c = compressive strength of concrete (Mpa)
• An approximate formula for the calculated spiral steel ratio in terms of physical properties of
the column cross section may be derived from the preceding definition of ρs.
• In Figure, we denote the overall core diameter (out-to-out of spiral) as Dch and the spiral
diameter (center to center) as Ds.
ɸ Factor Considerations
• Columns discussed so far have had strength-reduction factors applied in a straightforward
manner.
• That is, ɸ = 0.75 for spiral columns, and ɸ = 0.65 for tied columns.
• These ɸ factors correspond to the compression-controlled strain limit or a net tensile strain in
the extreme tension reinforcement, ɛt ≤ 0.002.
• Eccentrically loaded columns, however, carry both axial load and moment. For values of ɛt
larger than 0.002, the ɸ equations from ACI Code will be used:
Example 1
Using the interaction diagrams, find the axial load strength ΦPn and the moment strength ΦMn for
the column cross section with six Φ29 bars, as shown in Figure bellow. Eccentricity e = 125 mm.,
and use f ‘c = 28 Mpa and fy = 413 Mpa. Compare the results with Example 1 case b.
350 mm
350 mm
500 mm
Example 4:
Example 2:
Design a tied square column for Pu=2500 kN and Mu=450 kN.m, take f’c=28 Mpa, fy=413 Mpa.
BIAXIAL BENDING
The methods discussed in the preceding sections permit rectangular or square columns to be
designed if bending is present about only one of the principal axes. There are situations, by no
means exceptional, in which axial compression is accompanied by simultaneous bending about both
principal axes of the section. Such is the case, for instance, in corner columns of buildings where
beams and girders frame into the col-umns in the directions of both walls and transfer their end
moments into the columns in two perpendicular planes. Similar loading may occur at interior
columns, particu-larly if the column layout is irregular.
The situation with respect to strength of biaxially loaded columns is shown in Fig. below. Let X and
Y denote the directions of the principal axes of the cross section. In Fig. (a), the section is shown
subject to bending about the Y axis only, with load eccentricity ex measured in the X direction. The
corresponding strength inter-action curve is shown as case (a) in the three-dimensional sketch in
Fig. (d) and is drawn in the plane defined by the axes Pn and Mny. Such a curve can be established
by the usual methods for uniaxial bending. Similarly, Fig. (b) shows bending about the X axis only,
with eccentricity ey measured in the Y direction. The corresponding interaction curve is shown as
case (b) in the plane of Pn and Mnx in Fig. (d). For case (c), which combines X and Y axis bending,
the orientation of the resultant eccentricity is defined by the angle λ:
Constructing such an interaction surface for a given column would appear to be an obvious
extension of uniaxial bending analysis. In Fig. (c), for a selected value of θ, successive choices of
neutral axis distance c could be taken. For each, using strain compatibility and stress-strain relations
to establish bar forces and the concrete compressive resultant, then using the equilibrium equations
to find Pn, Mnx, and Mny, one can determine a single point on the interaction surface. Repetitive
calculations, easily done by computer, then establish sufficient points to define the surface. The
triangular or trapezoidal compression zone, as shown in Fig. (c), is a complication, and in general
the strain in each reinforcing bar will be different, but these features can be incorporated.
The uniaxial load strengths Pnx, Pny, and Pn0 can be calculated according to the equations and
method given earlier in this chapter. After that, they are substituted into the above Bresler equation
to calculate Pn .
Example 3:
Design a tied rectangular column for Pu=800 kN, Muy=200 and Mux=150 kN.m, take f’c=28 Mpa (4
ksi), and fy=413 Mpa (60 ksi).