Addressing a claim
The 53 foot long beams to the east of girder A2001 would buckle at approximately 8,000 lbs of axial force when they were at 600 degrees C. The six 7/8" diameter ASTM A325 bolts in their connection to the girder would require about 18,000 lbs. each to shear at 600 degrees C. That is 108,000 lbs. to break the bolts at 600 degrees C and 8,000 lbs. to buckle the beam.
The above is one of the argument Tony Szamboti is making for a "pristine" building. The beam in question is a 52ft long W24x55. His claim is not true, and I'll explain why.
Background
Axial buckling occurs when the axial compressive stress in a member exceeds the critical buckling stress (F
cr). F
cr is a function of the unbraced length in either the major axis, or the minor axis of the member. For a typical floor beam, the vertical direction is the major axis (aka the strong axis) while the horizontal direction is the minor axis (aka the weak axis). A typical floor beam typically has no bracing in the major axis (except at the ends) and it is braced in the minor axis by beams framing in to it. For example, the girder A2001 that spans between column 79 and column 44 is braced by the multiple beams that frame into it. The weak axis is also considered
continually braced by headed anchor studs that are part of a composite floor deck (see AISC 360-10 Commentary I7 (p. 16.1-375)).
As the beam begins to heat, it expands. The shear studs restrain this expansion. At about 100C, the first shear studs begin to fail. By 300C, all but 3 shear studs have failed (see NCSTAR 1-9 p.353). In between these two events, the beam is expanding in a partially restrained condition and loading the bolts at the end. Many of the shear studs are still intact, these shear studs brace the beam against minor axis buckling.
Per NIST, the nominal capacity of each headed anchor stud is about 20kip and there are 28 of them per beam (roughly 2ft on center).
Thermal Strain
At 100C, the beam has a thermal strain (d
T) of 0.00098 (see NCSTAR 1-9 p.344) and at 300C, the beam has thermal strain of 0.00378. From simple engineering mechanics, strain is:
d= P/AE
or
P = d
T * A * E
Where A is the cross-sectional area of the member, E is the Modulus of Elasticity and P is the axial force required to restrain the above strain.
For the W24x55 beam:
P(dT = 100C) = 0.00098 * 16.2in
2 * 29000ksi = 460kip
P(dt = 300C) = 0.00378 * 16.2in
2 * 29000ksi = 1776kip
Compressive Strength
F
cr can be directly computed (or looked up in a table as I'll do) but the member's slenderness ratio:
K*L / r
where K = 1.0 for our case, L is the unbraced length of the member in the major or minor axis and r is the radius of gyration (a derived unit) in the respective axis.
Let's assume that many, but not all, of the headed anchor studs have failed at some temperature between 100C and 300C. The unbraced length of the major axis is still the entire length of the beam. The unbraced length in the minor axis is the distance between these studs. If we were to assume that there were 7 shear studs left, the unbraced length for minor axis buckling would be somewhere around 8ft.
KL/r (major) = 1.0 * 624in / 9.11in = 68.4
KL/r (minor) = 1.0 * 96 / 1.34in = 71.6
The larger slenderness ratio, 71.6, controls. AISC 360-05 table 4-22 (
aside: this table was removed in AISC 360-10!) shows the F
cr of a Fy = 50ksi w/ a slenderness ratio of 72 as 30.8ksi. This includes a phi factor of 0.9, removing that gives an F
cr of 34.2ksi. The axial capacity of the W24x55 beam is:
P
n = A*F
cr
P
n = 16.2in
2*34.2ksi = 554kips.
Conclusion
A few drinks later and its time to dot our t's and cross our i's. We need to acknowledge that we don't know what temperature the shear studs are in the assumed condition. But we do know that is at least 100C. At that temperature, the beam could impart up to 460kip on the beam-girder connection. We also know that the 7 remaining shear studs could reduce that axial force of 460kip by 20kip each. There's also a ~20kip vertical shear reaction from gravity loads at the connection. In total, that means there's about 340kip available to damage the beam-girder connection, a fair bit higher than the 8kip Tony Szamboti has claimed.
tl;dr: Tony Szamboti is wrong. This is really complicated and time dependent, use a 3D model for best results.