Design With Cables
Design With Cables
Design With Cables
Tension-only members in structures have been used for decades: from canopies in Roman times to suspension bridges for crossing rivers and deep gorges by people in America, Asia and Africa. Common applications of tensiononly members were in temporary structures such as tents and in construction equipment. The materials used in these structures were mainly woven ropes from hemp or vines. With developments in the skills of blacksmithing in the early Middle Ages, nonmetallic tension members were replaced with chains and link bars such as ties in domes and arch structures. The introduction of the cable, formed from a twisted array of single wires, dates back to the industrial revolution where these cables were mainly used as running cables. Stationary steel cables in structures were used mainly as guys in towers and catenaries in bridge structures. The introduction of cables in buildings, mainly roofs, is relatively new and dates only to the 1930s.
Characteristics
The ability to design large spans with little self weight and high load capacities, as well as exploring new architectural expressions, made cable structures very popular, though their structural behavior is unique and unconventional compared to common structures. Unlike the common design, where the strength of a member is derived from its
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load is applied to the top of the tower. (See Figure 3) The force in the windward guy increases, while the force in the leeward guy decreases. Note that the force in the mast stays constant. As the force on the tower increases, the leeward guy loses all its pretension; the base to resist the overturning moment is now reduced to the depth between the mast and the wind ward guy (1/2 the original base). The force in this guy increases twice as rapidly, and the force in the mast also changes as rapidly as that in the guy. (See Figure 4) The change in this abrupt behavior is due to the change of the structural system, initiated by the loss of the pretension. Cable-net structures behave in a similar way. Deformations and cable effectiveness can be controlled through the pre-stress initiated by the jacking of the cables. In some structures, pre-stress is introduced through the gravity loads. In the design, cable net structures are analyzed through non-linear programs. These programs work with iterations in the following way. Small incremental loads are applied to the structure. The deformations and forces are being used at each incremental step to form the basis of the new model for the next load step. This procedure is repeated until the total load value has been applied to the structure. Any cable that went slack is being eliminated from the structure as the analysis continues. The program reactivated the cable if it is tensioned again. In reality, a cable will never 16
loose all its tension. The transition from high tension to tension that can be neglected in the analysis is not linear, as Figure 2 shows. New programs can work with variable modulus of elasticity to simulate this fact. However, in most programs, multiple nodes in the cable are used to determine its segmental deformation and force. This technique will yield the deformation/force behavior within the cable span. These steps are possible through powerful computers and programs that can solve large deformations in structural models. The response to the pre-stress in cables is not uniform. If a tensioned cable is loaded axially by increase in tension, the response is almost linear regardless of the level of prestress. However, if the tensioned cable is loaded perpendicular to the deformation, cable forces are a direct function of its material as well as its initial tension.
One of the implications of the nonPaul A. Gossen, PE is Principal at Geiger linearity of cable nets is in the assignment of Engineers. He has designed cable structures for Factors of Safety to this structure as well 37 years and is an active member of the ASCE as its components. In Working Stress Design Committee 19 - Structural Application of (WSD) the stress, force and deformation Steel Cables for Buildings, as well as a member behavior are assumed to be linear, even beyond of the committee on tension fabric structures. the service load. The nominal strength of the cable is reduced by a factor of safety to a safe cable working load level. This factor is meant to account for accidental overloads, material and fabrication imperfections. It does not determine to what magnitude or percent it covers an overload of the structure itself, and what percentage covers the material/fabrication imperfections. Thus, due to the non-linearity of the cable structure, the Factor of Safety against overload can vary wildly and stays indeterminate unless the structure is analyzed beyond the service load to a load level that incorporates the desired Factor of Safety. A Factor of Safety against over stressing the cable ( as it is done today) does not coincide with a Factor of Safety of Figure 4: Force-Load Graph overloading the structure. STRUCTURE magazine November 2004
It has been suggested that the Load & Resistance Factored Design (LRFD) approach be used, in which the service load is projected to an ultimate load level at which failure occurs. The material strength is modied by a resistance factor to account for material and fabrication deviations from the design assumptions. However, superposition of load effects with varying amplication factors is not applicable for non-linear structures, and thus the strict application of LRFD will give erroneous results. Furthermore, the ultimate load approach may result in individual cables stressed beyond their accepted level under service loads, while still satisfying the ultimate load design requirements. It is apparent that the analysis and design of these structures can be much more laborious than what is common in the design and analysis of conventional structures. However, not all cable structures require extensive analysis. Enough structural behavior is understood beyond the service load limit to design a guyed tower or gravity pre-stressed cable system, such as the Madison Square Garden roof ( it was designed by hand ), that do not warrant extensive analysis for the design. The need for extensive analysis must be determined by evaluating the complexity of the cable net in concert with the cable pre-stress and applied loads.