Compressive Resistance of Steel Columns in Fire: Rankine Approach
Publication: Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume 126, Issue 3
Abstract
A simple and direct analytical formula has been derived to determine the compressive resistance of steel columns subjected to fire conditions. The approach is based on the Rankine principle, which allows the strength and the stability of a steel column at a particular temperature to be separately determined. Here, the evaluation of column strength is based on the rigid-plastic theory, while the stability consideration is based on the elastic-buckling theory. By considering the two factors in this manner, the proposed approach allows for their interaction. One important feature is that the same analytical formula can be used for both axially and eccentrically loaded columns. In addition, the proposed formula does not require any calibrations against test data. The proposed formula has been verified against a set of published column test results and other analytical predictions. The comparison study shows consistently good agreement with both the test and the analytical results.
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Received: Dec 21, 1998
Published online: Mar 1, 2000
Published in print: Mar 2000
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