Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Wiki Markup
\\

*Yield, ultimate, and expected stress* values are defined on the Material Property Data form. Yield (Fy) and ultimate (Fu) stress values are properties of the material. These values are used in structural design, and in the definition of fiber [hinges|kb:Hinge].

Expected yield (Fye) and expected tensile (Fue) stresses are the product of a code-prescribed factor and the expected strength of the material. This factor is typically around 1.1, as with FEMA 356 Table 5-3. These effective stress values represent the material response which occurs approximately halfway along the x-axis of the [force-deformation|kb:Material nonlinearity] relationship. FEMA 356 recommends using effective strength for deformation-controlled actions. Minimum strength represents the lower bound of [nonlinear|kb:Nonlinear] material response, which is best for force-controlled actions. Expected stress values are used to automatically generate [hinge|kb:Hinge] properties for [P-M2-M3|P-M2-M3 hinges] and P-M hinges.

{hidden-content}
*Related Incident:*
* {incident:no=45461|comment=Current design is that hinge properties depend on minimum rather than expected values}
* {incident:no=46383|comment=Material Definition for Rebar per BS or Eurocode}

*Related EmailEmails:*
* {email:date=2008-12-02|from = rs|to = ok|subject = RE: Client ID # is 'undisclosed' - questions of using Brim vs. SAP2000|comment= Expected yield stress and expected tensile stress|id=0}
* {email:date=11/15/2012|from=is|to=bm|subject=Explanation of how Fye and Fy are used|comment=Explanation of how Fye and Fy are used|id=9896137} 
{hidden-content}