By means of result combinations, it is possible to create, among other things, the envelopes for internal forces and deformations. Thus, you can quickly find the maxima and minima for the subsequent design.
In the case of a large amount of reinforcement, it might be useful to grade the longitudinal reinforcement of a beam, which means: curtailment. The grading corresponds to the tensile force distribution. Using RF-CONCRETE Members and CONCRETE, you can specify the curtailment of the reinforcement, which is considered in the automatically proposed reinforcement for the longitudinal reinforcement. When determining this reinforcement proposal, it is necessary to ensure that the envelope of the acting tensile force can be absorbed.
Heat loss due to external components without thermal decoupling of the internal components is enormous. For this reason, external structural components are thermally separated from the building envelope using a special built-in component. For the connection of a balcony slab with a reinforced concrete floor, Schöck Isokorb® or HALFEN HIT Insulated Connection can be used, for example. For the design of such built-in components, the respective technical approval must be taken into account. The following article shows an example of considering Schöck Isokorb® in the FEM calculation.
With RFEM 5.6.1103 and RSTAB 8.6.1103, there is an improved result output for the nonlinear calculation of reinforced concrete design in RF‑CONCRETE Members and CONCRETE. The new result windows include tables with a wide range of loading results; for example, governing load with the maximum ratio. In addition, you can now display the envelope results for the maximum ratio graphically.
You can obtain many load combinations, especially when using the automatic generation of combinations. These are automatically combined in a result combination (RC) with the OR operator as an envelope. Then, if you select one RC for design in RF‑/STEEL EC3, it may lead to a very long calculation time because the module calculates all combination options individually by default, then displays the results of the governing combination.
Moving loads can be generated easily with RF‑MOVE Surfaces. A library is available with load models as defined in Eurocode 1, Part 2. The input of step size, offsets at start and end, and the distance to a reference line make it possible for the user to generate user‑defined load models and influence the number of load cases generated. RF‑MOVE Surfaces generates load cases and, optionally, a result combination as an envelope of all results.