Flat Plate–Voided Concrete Slab Systems: Design, Serviceability, Fire Resistance, and Construction
Publication: Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
Volume 22, Issue 3
Abstract
Flat plate–voided concrete slab systems, which have been used for many years in Europe and other parts of the world, are becoming increasingly popular in the United States because of their many inherent benefits. Such benefits include reduced weight, which results in smaller seismic forces and larger superimposed loads for given span lengths; economical longer spans; reduced floor-to-floor heights; accelerated construction schedules; and inherent fire resistance that meets the fire-rating requirements of the International Building Code (IBC). This paper presents (1) the history and recent research on flat plate–voided concrete slab systems, (2) flexural and shear strength design requirements, (3) deflection requirements, (4) vibration criteria for human comfort and sensitive equipment, (5) fire-rating requirements in accordance with the IBC, (6) typical installation sequences, and (7) a summary of the main benefits of flat plate–voided concrete slab systems. The paper shows that such systems can be designed using the provisions of the American Concrete Institute (ACI) for strength and serviceability and can satisfy the minimum requirements for vibration control and fire resistance.
Get full access to this article
View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.
References
ACI (American Concrete Institute). (2014). “Building code requirements for structural concrete and commentary.” ACI 318-14, Farmington Hills, MI.
ACI (American Concrete Institute). (2000). “Control of deflection in concrete structures.” ACI435R-95, Farmington Hills, MI.
ASTM. (2016). “Standard test method for fire tests of building construction and materials.” ASTM E119–16, West Conshohocken, PA.
Churakov, A. (2014). “Biaxial hollow slab with innovative types of voids.” J. Constr. Unique Build. Struct., 6(21), 70–88.
CRSI (Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute). (2014a). Design guide for voided concrete slabs, Schaumburg, IL.
CRSI (Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute). (2014b). Design guide for vibrations of reinforced concrete floor systems, Schaumburg, IL.
DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung). (1977). “Fire behavior of building materials and building components; building components; definitions, requirements and tests.” DIN 4102-2, Berlin, Germany.
Harmathy, T. Z., Sultan, M. A., and MacLaurin, J. W. (1987). “Comparison of severity of exposure in ASTM E119 and ISO 834 fire resistance test.” J. Test. Eval., 15(6), 371–375.
ICC (International Code Council). (2015). International building code, IBC 2015, Washington, DC.
ISO. (1989). “Evaluation of human exposure to whole-body vibration – Part 2: Human Exposure to continuous and shock-induced vibrations in buildings (1 to 80 Hz).” ISO 2631-2, Geneva, Switzerland.
ISO. (1999). “Fire-resistance tests - Elements of Building construction - Part 1: General requirements.” ISO 834-1 (Amended 2012), Geneva, Switzerland.
Lai, T. (2010). “Structural behavior of BubbleDeck slabs and their application to lightweight bridge decks.” Master’s thesis, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.
Pama, R. P., Imsom-Somboon, S., and Lee, S. L. (1975). “Elastic rigidities of circularly voided slabs.” Build Sci., 10(3), 207–212.
SAP2000 [Computer software]. Computers & Structures, Inc., Walnut Creek, CA.
Scanlon, A., and Bischoff, P. H. (2008). “Shrinkage restraint and load history effects on deflection of flexural members.” ACI Struct J., 104(4), 498–506.
Shetkar, A., and Hanche, N. (2015). “An experimental study on BubbleDeck slab system with elliptical balls.” Proc. of NCRIET-2015 & Indian J. Sci. Res., 12(1), 21–27.
Teja, P. P., Kumar, P. V., Anusha, S., Mounika, C. R., and Saha, P. (2012). “Structural behavior of BubbleDeck slab.” Proc., IEEE—Int. Conf. on Advances in Engineering, Science and Management (iCAESM -2012), IEEE, New York.
UL (Underwriters Laboratories). (2015). “Standard for fire tests of building construction and materials.” UL 263, Northbrook, IL.
Valivonis, J., Popov, V., Jonaitis, B., and Daugevičius, M. (2015). “The analysis of concreting process impacts on the behaviour of residual liners of cast-in-situ voided slabs.” Arch. Civ. Mech. Eng., 15(4), 997–1006.
Information & Authors
Information
Published In
Copyright
© 2017 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Jul 25, 2016
Accepted: Jan 13, 2017
Published online: Mar 28, 2017
Published in print: Aug 1, 2017
Discussion open until: Aug 28, 2017
Authors
Metrics & Citations
Metrics
Citations
Download citation
If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.