A design approach for the ring girder in elevated steel silos
Abstract
Silos in the form of the thin-walled cylindrical steel shells are commonly supported on a ring girder, which rests on a limited number of columns to discharge the content by gravity flow into transportation systems. Local supports in the elevated steel silos produce a significant circumferential non-uniformity in the axial membrane stresses in the silo shell. One way of reducing the non-uniformity of these stresses is to use a very stiff ring girder which partially or fully redistributes the stresses from the local support into uniform stresses in the shell. Previous works that attempt to produce design expressions only address isolated ring girders and ignore the key role of the interaction between the cylindrical shell and the supporting ring girder. The aim of this study is to achieve a more efficient and realistic design of ring girders resting either on four supports, or on four supports with secondary beams, or on eight supports. Pursuant to this goal, variations of the stress resultants and displacements in the ring girder which rests on different support conditions are derived for the first time using Vlasov's curved beam theory. These expressions have been evaluated with finite element analyses for an isolated ring girder. Subsequently, a complementary finite element parametric study was conducted to investigate the variation of the stress resultants and displacements caused by the connection of the shell and ring girder resting on different supporting conditions. These variations were plotted as a function of the shell-ring girder stiffness ratio (?) for each support condition. Finally, considering lower bound limits for the stress resultants and displacements, design equations were proposed for ring girders which rest on different support conditions. These expressions may easily be placed in a practical spreadsheet, which could be used with different data to give realistic predictions. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd