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Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Practical Design to Eurocode 2

The webinar will start at 12.30

Course Outline
Lecture Date Speaker Title
1 21 Sep Charles Goodchild Introduction, Background and Codes
2 28 Sep Charles Goodchild EC2 Background, Materials, Cover
and effective spans
3 5 Oct Paul Gregory Bending and Shear in Beams
4 12 Oct Charles Goodchild Analysis
5 19 Oct Paul Gregory Slabs and Flat Slabs
6 26 Oct Charles Goodchild Deflection and Crack Control
7 2 Nov Paul Gregory Detailing
8 9 Nov Jenny Burridge Columns
9 16 Nov Jenny Burridge Fire
10 23 Nov Jenny Burridge Foundations

Week 9: Fire 1
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Fire Design

Lecture 8
16th November 2016

Design exercise

From last week


(Lecture 8)

Week 9: Fire 2
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Solution - effective length & slenderness (M2)

Using PD 6687 method


Clear span is 4500 300 = 4200 mm and k1 = k2
EI c 500 4 12
Lc 4200
k = = = 0.41
2EI b 2 3000 300 3 12 2 3000 300 3 12
L 8600
+
9600
b

From Table (Table 4 of How toColumns)


Take beam width
as, say, half the
bay width

F = say 0.74
lo = 0.74 x 4.2 = 3.108 m

Check slenderness:
= 3.46 lo/h
= 3.46 x 3.108 /0.5 = 21.5

Solution - column moments


MEd = max[M02; M0Ed + M2; M01 + 0.5M2 ; e0NEd]
M02 = M + eiNEd
ei = l0/400 =3108/400 = 7.8 mm
NEd = 7146 kN
= 95.7 + 0.0078 x 7146 = 95.7 + 55.7 = 151.4 kNm
M0Ed = (0.6M02 + 0.4M01) 0.4M02
= 0.6 95.7 + 0.4 ( 95.7) 0.4 95.7 = 38.3 kNm
M01 = - 95.7 + 0.0078 x 7146 = -95.7 + 55.7 = - 40.0 kNm
e0NEd = 0.02 x 7146 = 142.9 kNm
e0 = Max[h/30,20mm]
= Max[500/30,20mm] = 20 mm
M2 =?

Week 9: Fire 3
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Solution slenderness limit (M2)

Limiting slenderness:
A = 0.7 (use default value)
B = 1.1 (use default value)
C = 1.7 rm = 1.7 M01/M02 = 1.7 (-40.0/151.4) = 1.96
n = NEd/Acfcd = 7146 x 1000/(5002 x 0.85 x 50/1.5) = 1.01
lim = 20 ABC/n
= 20 x 0.7 x 1.1 x 1.96/1.01
= 30.0

Slenderness:
30.0 > 21.5 ...section is not slender . . . . M2 = 0

Solution- column moments


MEd = max[M02; M0Ed + M2; M01 + 0.5M2 ; e0NEd]
M02 = M + eiNEd
ei = l0/400 =3108/400 = 7.8 mm
NEd = 7146 kN
= 95.7 + 0.0078 x 7146 = 95.7 + 55.7 = 151.4 kNm
M0Ed = (0.6M02 + 0.4M01) 0.4M02
= 0.6 95.7 + 0.4 ( 95.7) 0.4 95.7 = 38.3 kNm
M01 = - 95.7 + 0.0078 x 7146 = -95.7 + 55.7 = - 40.0 kNm
e0NEd = 0.02 x 7146 = 142.9 kNm
e0 = Max[h/30,20mm]
= Max[500/30,20mm] = 20 mm
M2 =0
By inspection,
max[M02; M0Ed + M2; M01 + 0.5M2 ; e0NEd] = MEd = 151.4 kNm

Week 9: Fire 4
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Solution determine As

d2 = cnom + link + /2 = 35 + 8 + 16 = 59 mm
d2/h = 59/500 = 0.118
MEd/(bh2fck) = 151.4 x 106/(5003 x 50) = 0.024
NEd/(bhfck) = 7146 x 1000/(5002 x 50) = 0.57

Interaction Chart

0.09
0.57

0.024

Week 9: Fire 5
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Solution determine As

Asfyk/bhfck = 0.09
As = 0.09 x 5002 x 50 / 500 = 2250 mm2 Try 8 H20 (2513 mm2)
But > 4 no bars so check d2/h
Average d2 = (3 x 59 + 1 x 250 [say] ) / 4 = 107 mm : d2/h = 0.214
Interpolating between charts for d2/h = 0.20 and d2/h = 0.25

Interaction Chart

Asfyk/bhfck

0.57 0.10

0.024

Week 9: Fire 6
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Solution determine As

Asfyk/bhfck = 0.09
As = 0.09 x 5002 x 50 / 500 = 2250 mm2 Try 8 H20 (2513 mm2)
Check d2/h
Average d2 = (3 x 59 + 1 x 250 [say] ) / 4 = 107 mm : d2/h = 0.214
Using chart for d2/h = 0.20
Asfyk/bhfck = 0.10
As = 0.10 x 5002 x 50 / 500 = 2500 mm2
Use 8 H20 (2513 mm2)
Links
Diameter = max (6, 20/4) = 6 say 8mm diam
scl,tmax = min {12 min; 0.6b ; 240mm} = 240 mm
Bar centres = 500/2 -59 = 191 mm therefore each bar to be
restrained
With H8 links in 3 legs each way @ 225 cc

Fire

Week 9: Fire 7
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Structural Fire Design


Part 1-2, Fig 5.2 Figure 4.2

Scope

Part 1-2 Structural fire design gives several methods for fire engineering
Tabulated data for various elements is given in section 5

Reinforcement cover
Axis distance, a, to centre of bar
a = c + m/2 + l

a Axis
Distance

Eurocode 2: Part 1.2 Structural


Fire Design
General
Basis of fire design
Material properties
Design procedures
Simplified and advanced calculation methods
Shear and torsion 100 Pages
Spalling
Joints
Protective layers
Tabulated data
High strength concrete
Annexes A, B, C, D and E

Week 9: Fire 8
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Chapter 2: Basis of Fire Design

Requirements:
Criteria considered are:
R Mechanical resistance (load bearing)
E Integrity (compartment separation)
I Insulation (where required)

M Impact resistance (where required)

Actions - from BS EN 1991-1-2


Nominal and Parametric Fire Curves

Chapter 2: Basis of Fire Design

Verification methods Ed,fi Rd,fi(t)

Member Analysis Ed,fi = fi Ed


Ed is the design value for normal temperature design
fi is the reduction factor for the fire situation
fi = (Gk + fi Qk.1)/(GGk + Q.1Qk.1) fi is taken as 1 or 2 (= 1 - NA)

Week 9: Fire 9
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Design Procedures

Tabulated data (Chapter 5)


Simplified calculation methods
Advanced calculation method

Which method?

Week 9: Fire 10
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Section 5. Tabulated Data


Cl. 5.1 -

Provides design solutions for the standard fire exposure up to 4


hours

The tables have been developed on an empirical basis


confirmed by experience and theoretical evaluation of tests
Values are given for normal weight concrete made with siliceous
aggregates
For calcareous or lightweight aggregates minimum dimension
may be reduced by 10%
No further checks are required for shear, torsion or anchorage
No further checks are required for spalling up to an axis
distance of 70 mm
For HSC (> C50/60) the minimum cross section dimension should
be increased

Elements
Approach for Beams and Slabs very similar
Separate tables for continuous members
One way, two way spanning and flat slabs
treated separately

Columns depend on load and slenderness

Walls depend on exposure conditions

Week 9: Fire 11
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Continuous Beams
Table 5.6 Table 4.6

Flat Slabs
1992-1-2 Table 5.9 Table 4.8

Week 9: Fire 12
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Columns Tabular Approach


Columns more Tricky!
Two approaches
Only for braced structures
Unbraced structures columns
can be considered braced if
there are columns outside the
fire zone

Columns: Method A
Table 5.2a Table 4.4A

The minimum
dimensions are
larger than
BS 8110

fi = NEd,fi/ NRd = Gk + 1,1 Qk,1/(1.35Gk + 1.5 Qk) NEd/ NRd Conservatively 0.7
where NEd,fi is the design axial load in the fire condition
NRd is the design axial resistance at normal temperature

Week 9: Fire 13
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Limitations to Table 5.2a


Limitations to Table 5.2a for Method A:

Effective length of the column under fire conditions


l0,fi <= 3m.
First order eccentricity under fire conditions:
e = M0Ed,fi / N0Ed,fi <= emax = 0.15 h
Amount of reinforcement:
As < 0.04 Ac

Method A
.
= 120( ) (Exp 5.7)

where:
1+
= 83 1.0
0.85"" +
(as cc = 0.85 in the UK, Rfi = 83(1.0-fi))

Ra = 1.6(a-30)
where a is the axis distance

Week 9: Fire 14
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Method A
.
= 120( ) (Exp 5.7)

Rl = 9.6 (5 - l0,fi)
where l0,fi is the effective length in fire.
For an insitu column in a braced structure this can be
taken is 0.5 l for lower storeys and 0.7 l for the top
storey. (2 m l0,fi 6m)

Method A
.
= 120( ) (Exp 5.7)

Rb = 0.09b
b is the width or the diameter of a square or circular
column.
For a rectangular column:
b = 2Ac/(b+h)
200mm b 450mm
h 1.5 b

Week 9: Fire 15
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Method A
.
= 120( ) (Exp 5.7)

Rn = 0 where n=4 (corner bars only)


Rn = 12 where n>4
(n is the number of longitudinal bars)

Method A
+ $ + %+ & + ' .
= 120( )
120
What is the fire resistance period of a 3.5m long, 300 x 600 column,
NEd = 2950kN, NRd = 3600kN, with 25mm bars, 10mm links, cover
25mm?
fi = 0.7 x 2950/3600 = 0.57 Rfi = 83(1-0.57) = 35.4
a = 25+10+25/2 = 47mm Ra = 1.6(47-30) = 27.2
l0,fi = 0.5 x 3.5 = 1.75, so l0,fi = 2m Rl = 9.6(5-2) = 28.8
b = 2 x b x 1.5b/(b + 1.5b) = 360mm Rb = 0.09 x 360 = 32.4
n>4 Rn = 12
R = 120((35.4 + 27.2 + 28.8 + 32.4 + 12)/120)1.8 = 150 minutes
(from table

Week 9: Fire 16
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Method A
+ $ + %+ & + ' .
= 120( )
120
What is the fire resistance period of a 3.5m long, 300 x 600 column,
NEd = 2950kN, NRd = 3600kN, with 25mm bars, 10mm links, cover
25mm?
fi = 0.7 x 2950/3600 = 0.57 Rfi = 83(1-0.57) = 35.4
a = 25+10+25/2 = 47mm Ra = 1.6(47-30) = 27.2
l0,fi = 0.5 x 3.5 = 1.75, so l0,fi = 2m Rl = 9.6(5-2) = 28.8
b = 2 x b x 1.5b/(b + 1.5b) = 360mm Rb = 0.09 x 360 = 32.4
n>4 Rn = 12
R = 120((35.4 + 27.2 + 28.8 + 32.4 + 12)/120)1.8 = 150 minutes
(from table: 90 minutes)

Week 9: Fire 17
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Columns: Method B

= 0.1 0.4% steel


= 0.5 2.0% steel
= 1.0 4.0% steel
(fck = 30MPa, fyk = 500MPa)

Limitations to Table 5.2b


l/h (or l/b) 17.3 for rectangular column (fi 30)

First order eccentricity under fire conditions:


e/b = M0Ed,fi /b N0Ed,fi 0.25 with emax= 100 mm

Amount of reinforcement, = As fyd / Ac fcd 1

For other values of these parameters see Annex C


(e/b 0.5, emax 200 mm)

Week 9: Fire 18
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Spalling
EC2 distinguishes between explosive spalling that can occur
in concrete under compressive conditions, such as in
columns, and the concrete falling off the soffit in the
tension zones of beams and slabs.
Explosive spalling occurs early on in the fire exposure and is
mainly caused by the expansion of the water/steam particles
trapped in the matrix of the concrete. The denser the
concrete, the greater the explosive force.
Unlikely if moisture content is less than 3% (NDP) by
weight. The assumption is that in exposure class X0 or
XC1 the moisture class is less than 3%
Tabular data OK for axis distance up to 70 mm
Falling off of concrete occurs in the latter stage of fire
exposure

High Strength Concrete -


Tabulated Data
Minimum cross section should be increased:

For walls and slabs exposed on one side only by:


For Class 1: 0.1a for C55/67 to C60/75
For Class 2: 0.3a for C70/85 to C80/95

For all other structural members by:


For Class 1: 0.2a for C55/67 to C60/75
For Class 2: 0.6a for C70/85 to C80/95

Axis distance, a, increased by factor:


For Class 1: 1.1 for C55/67 to C60/75
For Class 2: 1.3 for C70/85 to C80/95

Week 9: Fire 19
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

High Strength Concrete -


Spalling

For C 55/67 to C 80/95 the rules for normal strength concrete apply.
provided that the maximum content of silica fume is less than 6% by
weight.

For C 80/95 to C 90/105 there is a risk of spalling and at least


one of the following should be provided (NA):

Method A: A reinforcement mesh

Method B: A type of concrete which resists spalling

Method C: Protective layers which prevent spalling

Method D: Monofilament polypropylene fibres.

Other Methods

Simplified calculation method for beams, slabs


and columns
Full Non-linear temperature dependent ..
But all of these must have the caveat that they
are unproven for shear and torsion.

Week 9: Fire 20
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Annex E: Simplified Calculation


Method for Beams and Slabs
MRd1,fi
MRd2,fi

MEd,fi = wEd,fileff / 8

1
MRd,fi,Span

1 - Free moment diagram for UDL under fire conditions

Annex E: Simplified Calculation


Method for Beams and Slabs
Free bending moment in
fire condition MEd,fi:
MEd,fi = wEd,fileff2/8
where
wEd,fi = gk + 1qk

Moments of resistance in fire condition:


MRd,fi,Span = (s /s,fi ) ks() MEd (As,prov /As,req)
MRd,fi,Support = (s /s,fi ) MEd (As,prov /As,req) (d-a)/d
Where a is the required bottom axis distance given in Section 5
As,prov /As,req should not be taken greater than 1.3

Week 9: Fire 21
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

500C Isotherm Method

Ignore concrete > 500C


Strength of rebar
dependent on steel
temperature

500C Isotherm Method


Charts in BS EN 1992-1-2

Week 9: Fire 22
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Decrease in strength of
reinforcement (Figure 4.2)

Zone Method

Zones

Divide concrete into zones and work out average


temperature of each zone, to calculate strength

Week 9: Fire 23
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Zone Method

Factors for
concrete
strength

Zone Method

Calculate compression forces in zones

Balance forces with Fst,fi to calculate MRd,fi

Week 9: Fire 24
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Worked Example
NEd= 1824kN
Myy,Ed= 78.5kNm
Mzz,Ed= 76.8kNm
2 hour fire resistance
required
External, but no de-icing
salts
fck = 30MPa

Worked Example
Cover:
cmin,b = diameter of bar (assume 25mm bars with 8mm links)
cmin,dur = (XC3/XC4) 25mm
say cdev = 10mm
cnom (to main bars) = max{(25+10),(25+8+10)} = 43mm
Use cnom = 35mm to 8 mm links

Week 9: Fire 25
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Worked Example
Check fire resistance of R120 to Method A
eccentricity e < 0.15b
e = MEd/NEd = 78.5x103/1824 = 43mm
0.15 x 350 = 52.5mm OK
Assume 8 bars OK
l0,fi = 0.7l = 2.8m < 3m OK
From Table 5.2a: min dimensions = 350/57
Column is 350mm, axis distance required = 57mm
Check cover 35mm + 8 (link) + /2 = 55.5mm
Increase links to 10 mm diam
or increase nominal cover to 40mm.

Design exercise for next week


Using Equation 5.7, work out the fire resistance of a 250
x 750 column with an axial capacity of 3750kN and an
axial load in cold conditions of 3500kN. The column is on
the ground floor of a three storey building and the length
is 4.5m. The cover is 30mm, main bars are 20mm and
the links are 10mm diameter.

Week 9: Fire 26
Practical Design to Eurocode 2 16/11/2016

Design Exercise
+ $ + %+ & + ' .
= 120( )
120
fi = Rfi =
a= Ra =
l0,fi = Rl =
b = Rb =
n= Rn =
R = 120((Rfi + Ra + Rl + Rb + Rn)/120)1.8 =

End of Lecture 9

Week 9: Fire 27

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