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Lecture 10.4.

1: Continuous Beams I
OBJECTIVE/SCOPE

To describe the behaviour of continuous composite beams; to explain the use of


rigid-plastic analysis to determine internal moments and forces, and to derive
plastic resistance moments.

PREREQUISITES

Lecture 7.2: Cross-Section Classification

Lecture 7.3: Local Buckling

Lecture 10.2: The Behaviour of Beams

Lecture 10.3: Single Span Beams

RELATED LECTURES

Lecture 10.4.2: Continuous Beams II

Lectures 10.5: Design for Serviceability

Lectures 10.6: Shear Connection

SUMMARY

The advantages of continuous beams are summarised and failure modes which
result from continuity in composite beams are identified. Plastic methods may be
used to determine internal moments and forces, provided that rotation capacity is
sufficient and lateral-torsional buckling does not occur. The scope for plastic
methods is related to classification of cross-sections in terms of limiting
breadth/thickness ratios for structural steel elements in compression. Other
measures needed to ensure adequate rotation capacity are also described. Simple
values for effective width of the concrete flange are presented and expressions for
the negative resistance moment of Class 1 and Class 2 sections are given. The
application of rigid-plastic analysis to determine the distribution of bending
moments is demonstrated.

1. INTRODUCTION
Continuous beams offer the following advantages over simple construction:

1. greater load resistance.


2. greater stiffness.

These result in a smaller steel section being required to withstand specified loading.

In this lecture, members are assumed to be continuous over simple supports or to be


rigidly connected to columns in braced frames. Additional cost will be incurred if
special methods, such as more complicated jointing, have to be provided to achieve
continuity. However, continuity of structural steel can be achieved economically by
running a single length of section across two or more spans. The concrete is cast
continuously over the supports and, to control shrinkage and other cracking, the
concrete is reinforced. A typical cross-section of a composite beam, in the region of
an internal support, is shown in Figure 1.

The disadvantages associated with continuous construction are:

1. increased complexity in design.


2. susceptibility to buckling in the negative moment region over internal
supports (see Figure 2a). Indeed this negative moment region may extend
over the whole of one span during construction (see Figure 2b). Two forms
of buckling may also be involved: local buckling of the web and/or bottom
flange, and lateral-torsional buckling. Only the former is treated here; lateral-
torsional buckling is discussed in the following Lecture 10.4.2.

After conceptual structural design has been done, which might possibly include
initial sizing of members based on experience or rough calculations, the designer
will wish to proceed to detailed calculations for the structure. The next stage is
therefore determination of internal moments and forces in critical regions for the
various loading cases and limit states. This is known as "global analysis" and
procedures for this, at the ultimate limit state, are discussed here and in the
following lecture.

Internal moments in continuous composite beams may be conveniently determined


by elastic analysis or, subject to certain conditions, by rigid-plastic analysis.
Whether plastic analysis is appropriate depends on the ductility of the
reinforcement and on the susceptibility of the steel section to local buckling, as
explained below. Elastic analysis is treated in the following lecture.
2. RIGID-PLASTIC GLOBAL ANALYSIS
This is a well-established method of analysis for determining internal moments and
forces in continuous steel structures. It is based on the assumption that plastic
regions are concentrated at discrete points which may be represented by "plastic
hinges". For the analysis to be valid, critical cross-sections must be capable of
developing and sustaining their plastic resistance moment until, under increasing
load, sufficient regions have fully-yielded for the plastic hinges to form a
mechanism.

The mechanism arises as a result of redistribution of moment which is achieved by


rotation of the already-yielded regions. To ensure that the resulting strains can be
accommodated without a reduction in resistance below the plastic moment,
limitations must be placed on the slenderness of the elements of the cross-sections
which are in compression. For steel structures, sections which can form a plastic
hinge with the rotation capacity required for plastic global analysis, are designated
Class 1 cross-sections. The limitations on flange slenderness and web slenderness
for such sections are given in design recommendations, such as Eurocode 3 [1], as
discussed in Lectures 7.2 and 7.3. These limitations recognise that some loss of
rotation capacity due to local buckling will be offset by beneficial effects such as
strain-hardening and the finite length of plastic regions. However, because of the
latter effect, it is necessary that cross-sections away from the theoretical locations
are also in Class 1, or at least in Class 2. By definition, Class 2 cross-sections can
develop the plastic resistance moment of the section although local buckling limits
the rotation capacity and prevents full redistribution of moment at such sections.

3. BEHAVIOUR OF CONTINUOUS COMPOSITE


BEAMS
The flexural performance of continuous composite beams has been investigated by
tests in which the secondary elements (shear connectors, transverse slab
reinforcement) were conservatively designed in order to preclude forms of failure
such as loss of interaction and longitudinal splitting of the slab. Initially, the
behaviour is substantially linear (Figure 3), but as load increases reduction in
flexural stiffness occurs.
In hogging moment regions, fine cracks appear in the concrete at relatively low
levels of load. As loading continues, cracking continues over an increasing length
and yielding and later strain-hardening may occur in the reinforcement and in the
lower (compression) part of the steel section. Redistribution of moment will occur
to the mid-span regions. Provided that collapse of the beam is not triggered by
crushing of the midspan concrete, by failure in shear, or by fracture of the
reinforcement, the support section will develop flange buckles, eventually causing
a loss of moment of resistance which initiates collapse (Figure 4).
In mid-span sagging moment regions, yielding occurs in the lower part of the steel
section and crushing occurs in the top of the concrete slab, causing redistribution of
moment to the supports. Typical sagging moment-curvature curves are shown in
Figure 5. The moment achieved can be significantly greater than the theoretical
plastic resistance moment (Mpl) of the composite section, mainly on account of
strain-hardening of the structural steel. It is evident from Figure 5, that deformation
may continue without drop in moment for a considerable curvature. However, the
rotation is small in composite beams having small slabs and/or weak concrete, large
steel sections and/or high yield stress; in such beams crushing limits the rotation
that will take place before reduction in moment occurs.
4. ROTATION CAPACITY FOR PLASTIC ANALYSIS
The nature of composite beams implies that a large amount of redistribution may be
required before the collapse mechanism is complete.

In the early stages of loading the beam behaves substantially elastically, with the
bending moments at the supports and in the midspan region being unequal. For
example, with a continuous beam of equal spans supporting uniform distributed
loading (Figure 6), the bending moment at the supports is up to twice as large as
that at midspan. However, the plastic resistance moment of midspan regions ranges
from being larger than that at the support, sometimes by a factor as high as three, to
being smaller (not usually the case). Consequently, a large amount of deformation
can be required with redistribution being either from or to the support, the former
being the usual case. Figure 7 shows as an example a two-span continuous beam
subject to uniform distributed loading. The rotation required on each side of the
support to complete a plastic hinge mechanism clearly increases as the resistance
moment at the support (Mpl) decreases relative to that at midspan (Mpl).
In continuous composite beams therefore, the rotation capacity required at a
particular critical cross-section will depend on:

1. the relative length of each span.


2. the type and position of loading on each span (uniformly distributed, central
point load, loads at quarter-points, etc).
3. the patterns of load on the spans (adjacent spans fully loaded, alternate spans
fully loaded, etc).
4. the relative magnitudes of the hogging and sagging moments of resistance
along the beam.
5. the moment-rotation characteristics of cross-sections along the beam.

The eventual failure mode of a beam is strongly influenced by the strain-hardening


and falling branch parts of the moment-rotation curves in the hogging and sagging
regions, for which there is no simple method of prediction. Requirements for the
satisfactory use of rigid-plastic analysis are therefore based on test results,
supplemented by parametric studies undertaken by computer. The scope for the
application of the method is therefore bounded by that of the parametric studies.

5. RIGID-PLASTIC ANALYSIS IN EUROCODE 4


The requirements proposed in Eurocode 4 [2], Section 4.5.2.2, to achieve sufficient
rotation capacity, permit the scope for rigid-plastic analysis to be given without
reference to the strain-hardening properties of steel, which are not usually known
by the designer. The requirements are:

1. At each plastic hinge location, the cross-section of the structural steel


component shall be symmetrical about the plane of its web.
2. All effective cross-sections at plastic hinge locations are in Class 1; all other
effective cross-sections are in Class 1 or Class 2.
3. Adjacent spans do not differ in length by more than 50% of the shorter span.
4. End spans do not exceed 115% of the length of the adjacent span.
5. In any span in which more than half the total design load is concentrated
within a length of one-fifth of the span, then at any hinge location where the
concrete slab is in compression, not more than 15% of the overall depth of
the member should be in compression (this condition does not apply if the
hinge will be the last to form in that span).
6. The steel compression flange at a plastic hinge location is laterally restrained
(this is usually so, as explained later).

6. CLASSIFICATION OF CROSS-SECTIONS
It can be seen from the above requirements that, unlike steel structures, the
definition of a Class 1 section in terms of limiting breadth/thickness ratios is not in
itself sufficient to ensure always that enough rotation capacity will be available for
plastic analysis in composite construction. Provided, however, that the
requirements given above concerning relative lengths of spans and arrangement of
loading are satisfied, the limits on breadth/thickness ratios for a Class 1 composite
section can be taken as those for steel sections given in Eurocode 3 [1]. The limits
for Class 1 and Class 2 sections, given in Tables 1(a) and (b) of this lecture, have
been taken from Tables 4.1 and 4.2, respectively, of Eurocode 4 [2].

For Class 2 sections, web encasement may be assumed to contribute to resistance to


local buckling, provided that it is reinforced and mechanically connected to the
steel section.

7. PLASTIC RESISTANCE MOMENTS


The plastic resistance of a composite beam in sagging bending has been described
in Lecture 10.2. The upper flange of the steel section may be in compression but is
restrained laterally through its connection to the concrete slab.

The negative moment of resistance can be determined as described below. The


lower flange of the steel section is now in compression. However, this flange is
usually restrained laterally by connection to a supporting element, such as a
column, which is itself prevented, at beam level, from moving out-of-plane.

It is assumed that the effect of co-existent vertical shear on the bending resistance
can be neglected. When the shear force exceeds half the plastic shear resistance of
the web of the steel section, allowance should be made for its effect on the
resistance moment, as described in the previous lecture.

The cross-sections considered are shown in Figure 8(a) (for a solid slab) and Figure
9(a) (for a slab formed with profiled steel sheeting). As in positive moment regions,
an effective width is used to make allowance for in-plane shear flexibility (shear
lag) of the concrete flange.
The ratio of the effective width to the real flange width depends on many factors,
including the type of loading, the support conditions, the cross-section considered
and the ratio of beam spacing to span. In most design recommendations
(particularly for buildings), however, very simple formulae are given for effective
width, related to the span(s) of the beam and expressed in terms of a length
lo between points of contraflexure; these should be taken simply as follows:

End span lo = 0,8L

Internal span lo = 0,7L

where L is the distance between supports for the span concerned, i.e. L1 or L2 in
Figure 10, which has been taken from Figure 4.3 of Eurocode 4 [2]; this also gives
a value appropriate for a span next to a cantilever, i.e. L3.
Research on shear lag in negative-moment regions has shown that when transverse
reinforcement appropriate to the shear connector spacing is provided, the cracked
slab is able to transfer shear to longitudinal reinforcement at a distance of several
slab thicknesses on either side of the steel member. Over an internal support,
Eurocode 4 gives:

lo = 0,25 (L1 + L2)

where L1 and L2 are the lengths of adjacent spans (Figure 10). Figure 10 also gives
a value appropriate to the support region of a cantilever.
To determine the negative moment of resistance, generally all properly anchored
reinforcing bars within the effective width are assumed to be stressed to their
design yield strengths fsk/s (Figure 8b). If the area of this reinforcement is Ar, then
the tensile resistance of the reinforcement, Rr, within the effective width of the slab
under negative moment is given by:

Rr = (fsk/s)Ar

Due to the possibility of fracture caused by lack of ductility, nominal slab


reinforcement (i.e. welded mesh or bars of less than 10mm diameter) should be
neglected in calculating Rr. All bars included when calculating Rr should be of high
ductility (Class H) as defined in Eurocode 2 [3].

At flexural failure, the whole of the concrete slab may be assumed to be cracked,
whilst all the structural steel is at its design yield strength fy/a in tension or
compression. The plastic neutral axis may be in the top flange or in the web. For
the latter case, the stresses are shown in Figure 8(b). The position of the neutral
axis is determined by considering longitudinal equilibrium.

Let Rw be the axial resistance of the web over a depth d between the flanges. Then
for a steel section with equal flanges, the plastic neutral axis will lie in the web if
Rr<Rw, whilst if Rr>Rw, the neutral axis will lie in the steel flange. For each case an
expression for the negative plastic resistance moment Mpl, can be determined by
considering the moment of each rectangular stress block about the neutral axis.

Case 1: Rr < Rw (plastic neutral axis lies in web)

Mpl = Ma + Rr

where Ma is the plastic resistance moment of the steel section alone;

D is the overall depth of the steel section;

Dr is the distance from the top of the steel beam to the centroid of the
reinforcement.

Case 2: Rr > Rw (plastic neutral axis lies in steel flange)

Assuming the thickness of the flange is small:

Mpl = Rs + RrDr
where Rs is the tensile resistance of the steel section. For a section of cross-
sectional area Aa,

Rs = (fy/a)Aa.

The cross-section shown in Figure 9 shows a slab formed with profiled steel
sheeting. The sheeting component is usually neglected when determining the
negative moment of resistance. For construction with profiled steel sheeting, it is
common practice to provide only a light mesh reinforcement in the slab, which, as
mentioned above, is neglected when calculating Rr. Thus if no further
reinforcement is provided (additional to the sheeting and the mesh), the negative
plastic resistance moment is given by Mpl=Ma.

8. DISTRIBUTION OF BENDING MOMENT


To design a suitable cross-section against flexure, it remains to determine the
distribution of bending moments due to the applied load.

Let the ratio of the negative to the positive moments of resistance in a proposed
section be . Therefore:

= Mpl/Mpl

Consider the end span of a continuous composite beam, subject to a uniformly


distributed design load of wf per unit length. The bending moment diagram at
collapse is as shown in Figure 11.
It can be shown by analysis of the collapse mechanism that:

and the required value of Mpl is:

Mpl = wf2L2

For an internal span with equal support moments (Figure 12) it can similarly be
shown that:

Mpl = wfL2/(8(1+))

For other arrangements of loading and/or resistance moments, the required


resistance may be determined from first principles.

9. CONCLUDING SUMMARY
Rigid-plastic analysis can be applied to continuous composite beams
provided that the rotation capacity at each plastic hinge location is sufficient
to enable the required hinge rotation to develop and lateral-torsional
buckling does not occur.
For composite beams in buildings, the requirement concerning rotation
capacity may be assumed to be satisfied when all cross-sections at plastic
hinge locations are in Class 1, and restrictions on relative length of adjacent
spans and depth of neutral axis are satisfied.
The plastic moment of resistance, in a hogging moment region, can be
determined by application of rectangular stress block theory to the structural
steel section and ductile reinforcing steel within the effective cross-section.
The effective widths of the concrete flange can be determined from
approximations of the sagging and hogging lengths of the beam.
Distribution of internal moments is dependent on the ratio of the negative
("hogging") moment of resistance to that in positive ("sagging") bending.

10. REFERENCES
[1] Eurocode 3: "Design of Steel Structures": ENV 1993-1-1: Part 1.1: General
rules and rules for buildings, CEN, 1992.

[2] Eurocode 4: "Design of Composite Steel and Concrete Structures": ENV1994-


1-1: Part 1.1: General rules and rules for buildings, CEN (in press).

[3] Eurocode 2: "Design of Concrete Structures": ENV 1992-1-1: Part 1.1: General
rules and rules for buildings, CEN, 1992.

11. ADDITIONAL READING


1. Johnson R.P., "Composite Structures of Steel and Concrete: Volume 1:
Beams, Columns, Frames and Applications in Building", Granada, 1975.
2. Johnson R.P. and Buckby R.J., "Composite Structures of Steel and Concrete:
Volume 2: Bridges", Second edition, Collins, 1986.
3. Brett P.R., Nethercot D.A. and Owens G.W., "Continuous Construction in
Steel for Roofs and Composite Floors", Structural Engineer, Volume 65A,
October 1987, pp. 355-368.
4. Johnson R.P. and Hope-Gill M.C., "Tests on Three Three-Span Continuous
Composite Beams", Proc.Inst.Civ.Engrs., Part2, Vol.61, June 1976, pp. 367-
381.
5. Johnson R.P. and Hope-Gill M.C., "Applicability of Simple Plastic Theory
to Continuous Composite Beams", Proc.Inst.Civ.Engrs., Part 2, Vol.61,
March 1976, pp. 127-143.
6. Ansourian P., "Experiments on Continuous Composite Beams",
Proc.Inst.Civ.Engrs., Part 2, Vol.71, December 1981, pp. 25-51.

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