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The Structural Engineer, Vol. 84 No.

21, 7th November 2006


Columns, sway frames and BS 5950-1:2000
Alasdair N. Beal BSc, CEng, MICE, FIStructE (Thomasons LLP)
Synopsis
BS 5950-1:2000 introduced major changes to column design, particularly in sway frames. Some of the new
clauses are badly draughted and contain anomalies. The new requirements for columns in sway frames make
design more complicated and also more conservative. However analysis of the stability of columns in sway
frames demonstrates that the second order analysis and notional lateral forces now required for load
Combination 1 are unnecessary, as adequate allowances for buckling and initial imperfections are already
included in standard column design stresses. Revisions to rectify these problems are proposed.
Introduction
Until 1985, designing a steel frame was quite simple: it was analysed at working loads and there were two
basic load combinations to consider: Combination 1 (dead load + live load, normal permissible stresses) and
Combination 2 (dead load + live load + wind load, 25% overstress allowed). Unless there was a horizontal
live load, there was no need to consider lateral loading and frame sway in Combination 1; in Combination 2
a simple first order analysis of wind moments was usually regarded as sufficient. Then (as now) beams were
usually designed as simply supported for vertical loads and the frame would either be braced to resist wind
loads, or else it would be designed as a sway frame, with the connections designed for the resultant wind
moments. The steel design code, BS 449, had a reputation for producing economical, safe designs and was
used to design many light, slender structures.
When the ‘limit state’ code BS 5950 appeared in 1985, this not only introduced factored loads but also a new
loading condition: in addition to the usual Combinations 1 and 2, Cl. 2.4.2.3 required that the structure
should also be checked with normal dead and live loads combined with a ‘notional horizontal load’ of either
0.5% of dead plus live load or 1% of dead load (whichever is greater). The purpose of the new loading was
stated to be ensure that the structure was ‘adequately stiff against sway’ but the loads were applied as
ultimate values and there was no deflexion check.
The load factors for the new loading were set as 1.4DL+1.3LL, intermediate between the 1.4DL+1.6LL of
Combination 1 and the 1.2DL + 1.2LL of Combination 2. Engineers generally took the view (probably
correctly) that as long as the design wind load exceeded the ‘notional horizontal load’ this new load
combination could safely be ignored.
The 1990 revision of BS 5950 introduced numerous minor amendments to correct errors and anomalies in
the original code. However it also included a significant change to Cl. 2.4.2.3: the load factors to be used
with the ‘notional horizontal load’ were increased from 1.4DL + 1.3LL to 1.4DL + 1.6LL. The ‘notional’
horizontal forces effectively became part of Combination 1 and could no longer be ignored. In theory this
amendment should have transformed the design of unbraced steel frames, making calculations more
complicated and designs more conservative. However in practice nothing much changed: it seems that most
engineers simply ignored the new loading requirements and carried on as before.
BS 5950-1: 2000 has brought more changes and this time they are not so easy to ignore. Cl. 2.4.2.3 has been
expanded into six clauses (2.4.2.3 - 2.4.2.8) and the ‘1% of factored dead load’ horizontal load has been
moved from Combination 1 to Combination 2, to be applied as an alternative to the calculated wind load
with a load factor of 1.2 rather than 1.4 as previously. However the ‘0.5% of (dead + live load)’ notional
horizontal load is still included in Combination 1 and there are new onerous analysis requirements: Cl.
2.4.2.5 requires second order effects to be taken into account and states that:
‘Where moment resisting joints are used to provide sway stiffness, unless they provide full continuity of
member stiffness, their flexibility should be taken into account in the analysis.’
Unless the connections in an unbraced frame are completely rigid (i.e. fully welded connections, or else
HSFG bolts or close tolerance bolts in shear) it seems that a full second order frame analysis (with allowance
for connection flexibility) is now required for basic Combination 1 design. This opens up exciting new sales
opportunities for computer software companies but for practising engineers it is a major headache. Some
have responded by ignoring the new requirements or else changing to BS 449. However committed BS 5950
users now face an uncomfortable choice: they must either spend a lot of money and time acquiring advanced
new computer analysis programmes and learning how to use them, or else they must give up designing
unbraced steel frames.
Often wind bracing in a building would obstruct a window or opening and engineers have traditionally
solved the problem by designing the frame connections to carry wind moments or else by adding a wind
portal. Now they must either tell their clients that they can’t do this any more, or else that it is a very
complex matter which requires advanced computer analysis (and a design fee to match). Perplexed clients
wonder why the steelwork designer of today finds it so difficult to do something which used to be regarded
as simple. If the new requirements are correct, there must also be a worry that existing unbraced steel frames
designed to previous codes may be unsafe.
Columns in BS 5950-1:2000 - draughting anomalies
The 2000 edition of BS 5950 was a major revision and large parts of the code were rewritten. Unfortunately
some of the new clauses were badly draughted.
(a) Cl. 4.7.1.1 defines the ‘segment length’ of a column as ‘the length between the points at which it is
restrained against buckling ...’. This means that for a cantilever column the segment length is infinite, so its
effective length must be infinite and its strength must be zero. This is wrong.
(b) Cl. 4.7.1.2 states that only shear diaphragms or triangulated bracing are acceptable as positional
restraints to columns, implying that portal bracing is not allowed. This contradicts Cl. 2.4.2.3, which states
that resistance to horizontal forces can be provided using ‘cantilever columns’ or ‘moment resisting joints’.
(c) Cl. 4.7.2 (1) says that columns in a ‘continuous structure’ may be designed using Appendix E effective
length coefficients instead of the standard Table 22 coefficients. However the Appendix E coefficients are
only valid for frames with perfectly rigid beam/column connections (i.e. either fully welded, or else with
HSFG bolts or close tolerance bolts acting in shear). Unfortunately the code does not make this clear: Cl. E.1
only states that beam/column connections need to be ‘moment resisting’. If Appendix E coefficients are
used to design columns with ordinary bolted connections, their effective lengths will be underestimated and
their strengths will be overestimated. This could be dangerous.
(d) Cl. 4.7.3 Table 22 refers to a column which is held in position at both ends (i.e. in a braced frame) as
‘non-sway mode’ and a column with only one end held in position (i.e. in a sway frame) as ‘sway mode’.
However in Cl. 2.4.2.6 there are ‘non-sway’ and ‘sway-sensitive’ frames and these are defined in a
completely different way: the frame is considered to be ‘non-sway’, even if it is unbraced, if it deflects by
H/2000 or less when the notional horizontal load is applied; if it deflects more than this, it is classed as
‘sway-sensitive’, even if it is braced. Thus it is possible to have a ‘sway sensitive’ frame which has ‘non-
sway mode’ columns, or to have a ‘non-sway’ frame which has ‘sway mode’ columns. This kind of
terminology is likely to confuse engineers and lead to mistakes being made.
The above points clearly require attention.
Sway frames
The main concern of the present paper is the effect BS 5950- 1:2000 has on steel columns in sway frames.
The behaviour of a column in a braced frame (Cl. 4.7.3 ‘non-sway mode’) is completely different from one
in an unbraced sway frame (Cl. 4.7.3 ‘sway mode’). In a braced frame, lateral forces and deflexions do not
usually affect the design of columns unless they form part of the wind bracing. However in a sway frame, the
columns must be designed to resist lateral loads and the way these are dealt with in the code can have major
effects on the complexity of design calculations and the economy of the structure.
Traditional design of a sway frame under vertical loading relies on code effective length factors and column
permissible stresses to provide frame stability. BS 5950-1:2000 Cl. 4.7 retains this approach, recommending
effective length factors between 1.2H and 2.0H for columns in sway frames. However Cl. 2.4.2 adds another
element to the calculation: in Combination 1 a notional horizontal load of 0.5% of total vertical load is
applied in addition to vertical loads and in Combination 2, a notional horizontal load of 1% of dead load
must be considered as an alternative to wind load.
Cl. 2.4.2.3 states that the purpose of these notional horizontal loads is ‘to provide a practical level of
robustness against the effects of incidental loading’ but it does not explain why they need to be applied in
both Combination 1 and Combination 2, or why two different values need to be considered. On the face of it,
Combination 2 would be a more logical place to deal with ‘incidental loading’ than Combination 1. However
the load factors which are specified in BS 5950-1:2000 mean that the Combination 1 notional horizontal load
will generally govern design and its Combination 2 counterpart will be irrelevant.
Strangely, Cl. 2.4.2.4 gives a completely different explanation of the purpose of the Combination 1 notional
horizontal load, stating that its function is ‘to allow for the effects of practical imperfections such as lack of
verticality’.
The contradiction between these two clauses is troubling: their explanations of the purpose of the
Combination 1 notional lateral load cannot both be correct. For the purposes of the present paper, it will be
assumed that the correct explanation is the one given in Cl. 2.4.2.4.
Why 0.5%?
The notional horizontal load of 0.5% of total vertical load appears in two places in BS 5950-1:2000. As
discussed above, it appears in Cl. 2.4.2.4 as a design loading to allow for columns being out of plumb.
However in C1. 2.4.2.6 it appears again in a completely different role: the sway deflexion of the frame with
this load applied is used to calculate the frame’s ‘sway mode elastic critical load factor’. There is no obvious
reason why the loading used to calculate the elastic critical load factor and the loading used to cover the
effects of columns being out of plumb should be the same as one another.
A notional horizontal load of 0.5% of vertical load has the same effect as columns out of plumb by H/200,
i.e. 15mm in a 3m storey height, or 100mm in the height of a 20m building. This is well outside the normal
erection tolerances for steel columns: BS 5950-2:2001 and the National Steelwork Specification both specify
that columns should not be out of plumb by more than H/600 (0.0017H) or 5mm per storey height(whichever
is less). The average out of plumb of all columns at any level is unlikely to exceed 0.0015H, so an equivalent
horizontal load of 0.15% of the total vertical load should be sufficient to cover out of plumb effects in any
frame complying with normal tolerances. An allowance of 0.5% appears to be unnecessarily conservative.
Column analysis - imperfections
There are three basic approaches to the analysis of a pin ended column:
(a) linear analysis, which ignores second order effects and initial imperfections,
(b) Euler’s buckling analysis, which includes second order effects but ignores initial imperfections and
(c) Young’s buckling analysis, which includes second order effects,initial imperfections and eccentric loads
and was the basis for the Perry-Robertson formula used in UK steel codes [l].
Over the years, successive editions of BS 449 have used various versions of the Perry-Robertson formula to
calculate the strength of slender columns and BS 5950 uses yet another version. It should be noted that:
(a) the formula allows fully for second order buckling effects and
(b) factor in the formula allows for column initial imperfections.
Table 1 shows the values of which have been used by different editions of BS 449 and BS 5950. It also
shows the corresponding initial bow (co) in the column, expressed as a proportion of the column length (L).
The values are tabulated in terms of L/r, where r = radius of gyration in the plane of buckling. (In some code
editions varies with column slenderness). BS 5950 gives four different column curves but for most
practical purposes only curves (b) (I section y-y, H section x-x) and (c) (H section y-y) are relevant. For ‘x-
x’ axis buckling, it is assumed that rxx = 0.42d and for ‘y-y’ axis ryy = 0.25d.
Most practical structural columns in sway frames are in the range L/r = 50-100. As can be seen, in BS 5950
the imperfection allowance is approximately 0.0014L for I sections and 0.002L for H sections. Bearing in
mind that slenderness ratios for ‘y-y’ buckling will generally be higher than for ‘x- x’ buckling, the
imperfection allowance in BS 449:1965 will also usually be 0.0014L or more [2].
Sway frame analysis
Traditionally, buckling analysis in the UK usually considers a pin-ended column (Fig 1). However an
alternative approach (used for slender columns in the concrete Eurocode) is to consider a cantilever ‘model
column’ (Fig 2).

Fig. 1

Fig. 2 Buckling of cantilever ‘model column’


Both approaches are equally valid and they give the same results: the cantilever column (effective length = 2
x column length) can be thought of as simply the top half of a pin- ended column. However we can see that
if the design is based on code stresses for a pin-ended column with an imperfection c0 in an effective length
of L, then for a cantilever column of height L/2 (effective length L) this allows for:
(a) all second order buckling effects; and
(b) the column being out of plumb by co/(L/2) = 2(co/L).
Therefore if the column is an H section, the BS 5950 design stresses include an allowance for it being up to 2
x 0.002L = 0.004L out of plumb (0.4%); if it is an I section (or if the design is to BS 449), the design stresses
allow for it being up to 2 x 0.0014L = 0.0028L out of plumb (0.28%). Therefore the standard BS 5950 or BS
449 column design stresses already include a realistic allowance for the column being out of plumb and also
allow for all second order buckling effects, without any need to apply the notional horizontal force and
second order analysis required by BS 5950-1:2000.

Fig. 3 Fixed-ended column

It could be argued that the above analysis only applies to a single cantilever column. However if we take two
cantilever ‘model columns’, invert one and place it on top of the other, this creates a classic unbraced fixed-
ended column (Fig 3). As can be seen, if the allowable column stresses are calculated from the Perry-
Robertson formula, these will again allow for the column being out of plumb by 2co/L and also all second-
order buckling effects. Once again, if the column is designed for vertical loads using the BS 5950 or BS 449
standard design stresses, these include adequate allowances for the column being out of plumb and also all
second order effects, without any need to apply the notional horizontal loads and second order analysis
required by BS 5950-1:2000.
Fig. 4 Sway frame

If we then consider a full frame (Fig. 4), it can be seen that the same principles and conclusions apply.
Of course it could be argued that real frames do not have perfectly rigid beams (although in a sway frame the
beams will usually be stiffer than the columns). However BS 5950 gives recommendations for estimating the
effective length of an unbraced column which is fixed at its base and fixed in direction at its head (1.2L), or
partially restrained in direction at its head (1.5L), or unrestrained in direction at its head (2.0L). No figure is
given in the code for a sway column with stiff beams at top and bottom but an effective length of 1.5L would
be reasonable for this situation.
These increased values of effective length reduce the buckling strength of the column, allowing for joint
rotation at the column ends, and they also give an increased allowance for the columns being out of plumb.
Once more, it appears that standard design using normal column design stresses already has the relevant
issues covered and there is no need to apply additional horizontal forces and second order analysis as
required by BS 5950-1:2000.
Conclusions
* Where a sway frame is being analysed and designed from first principles, rather than using normal
column design rules, the requirements of BS 5950-1:2000 Cl. 2.4.2.4 and 2.4.2.7 may be appropriate but
they are unnecessary for normal design using standard column design rules.
* Standard BS 5950 or BS 449 column design rules and allowable stresses already include adequate
allowances for out of plumb and second order effects in a sway frame. The additional forces and second
order analysis required by Cl. 2.4.2.4 and 2.4.2.7 amount to double-counting of allowances for these effects.
This is over-conservative and unnecessary.
* The above arguments do not apply to braced frames. In these it is important to ensure that the bracing is
stiff and strong enough to resist any lateral forces generated by the structure being out of plumb. If this is
dealt with in load combination 1, a lateral load of 0.15% of total vertical load would give an appropriate
allowance for a normal steel frame. However this would be unnecessary if the horizontal forces required by
Combination 2 are larger (see below).
* Although extra allowances for imperfections and second order effects are unnecessary for normal
column design in a sway frame, a conservative approach should be taken when calculating design moments
for the beam/column connections and full allowance should be made in these for moment magnification by
the ‘P
* Where the wind loading on a structure is low, in theory a design could be produced which was safe and
stable under normal loadings but had limited robustness and ability to resist accidental loadings etc. It would
be sensible to set a minimum value of lateral loading in load Combination 2 to cover this; a minimum
horizontal force of 0.5% of total vertical load would probably be reasonable for this purpose. However if this
is applied, there is no need to also apply the alternative of 1% of dead load as well.
* Many of the detailed recommendations for column design in BS5950-1:2000 are poorly draughted, with
errors, anomalies and confusing terminology in several clauses. These need to be revised.
Notes and References
1. Beal, A. N., ‘Who Invented Young’s Modulus?’, The Structural Engineer,78/14,18 July 2000
2. In theory it could be argued that the BS 449 allowance for imperfections is rather low for columns with L/r 50.
However increasing co/L for these from 0.0004 to 0.0008 would only reduce the column capacity by about 4%. This
would still leave a safety factor of 1.7 x 0.96 = 1.63, which is still adequate, so the problem is not significant.

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