STC 01015
STC 01015
STC 01015
PIP STC01015
Structural Design Criteria
PURPOSE AND USE OF PROCESS INDUSTRY PRACTICES
In an effort to minimize the cost of process industry facilities, this Practice has
been prepared from the technical requirements in the existing standards of major
industrial users, contractors, or standards organizations. By harmonizing these
technical requirements into a single set of Practices, administrative, application, and
engineering costs to both the purchaser and the manufacturer should be reduced. While
this Practice is expected to incorporate the majority of requirements of most users,
individual applications may involve requirements that will be appended to and take
precedence over this Practice. Determinations concerning fitness for purpose and
particular matters or application of the Practice to particular project or engineering
situations should not be made solely on information contained in these materials. The
use of trade names from time to time should not be viewed as an expression of
preference but rather recognized as normal usage in the trade. Other brands having the
same specifications are equally correct and may be substituted for those named. All
practices or guidelines are intended to be consistent with applicable laws and
regulations including OSHA requirements. To the extent these practices or guidelines
should conflict with OSHA or other applicable laws or regulations, such laws or
regulations must be followed. Consult an appropriate professional before applying or
acting on any material contained in or suggested by the Practice.
PIP STC01015
Structural Design Criteria
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1.1 Purpose
The purpose of this Practice is to provide the structural engineer with engineering
design criteria which harmonize the structural design requirements of process
industry companies and engineering/construction firms into a single document.
1.2 Scope
These general criteria define the minimum requirements for the structural design of
process industry facilities at onshore U.S. sites. This Practice is intended to be used
in conjunction with the PIP Architectural and Building Utilities Design Criteria
PIP ARC01015, Civil Design Criteria PIP CVC01015, Plant Site and Project Data
Sheets PIP CVC01016, and Building Data Sheets PIP ARC01016, as applicable.
2. References
When adopted in these criteria, the latest edition of the following applicable codes,
standards, specifications, and references in effect on the date of contract award shall be used,
except as otherwise specified. Short titles will be used herein when appropriate.
3. Design Loads
New facilities, buildings and other structures, including floor slabs and foundations, shall be
designed to resist the minimum loads defined in ASCE 7, local building codes, and this
Section. In addition to the loads in this Section, other loads which shall be considered, as
appropriate, include: snow, ice, rain, blast, hydrostatic, dynamic, upset conditions, earth
pressure, vehicles, buoyancy, erection, etc. Future loads shall be considered when specified
by the Owner.
For existing facilities, actual loads may be used in lieu of the minimum specified loads.
3.2.2 Areas for maintenance use (e.g., heat exchanger tube bundle servicing) shall
be designed to support these loads.
3.2.3 Minimum live loads shall be in accordance with ASCE 7, applicable codes
and standards, and, unless otherwise specified, the following:
Uniform Concentrated
Stairs and exitways 100 psf (4.8 kPa) 1,000 lbs (4.5 kN)
Walkways; operating and 75 psf (3.6 kPa) 1,000 lbs (4.5 kN)
access platforms
Control, I/O, HVAC room floors 100 psf (4.8 kPa) 1,000 lbs (4.5 kN)
Process manufacturing floors
and storage areas:
Light 125 psf (6.0 kPa) 2,000 lbs (9.0 kN)
Heavy 250 psf (12.0 kPa)* 3,000 lbs (13.5 kN)
* This 250 psf (12.0 kPa) live load is considered to include smaller
equipment.
3.2.4 Uniform and concentrated live loads listed in the table above shall not be
applied simultaneously.
3.2.5 Per ASCE 7, concentrated loads equal to or greater than 1,000 pounds (4.5
kN) may be assumed to be uniformly distributed over an area of 2.5 feet (762
mm) by 2.5 feet (762 mm), and shall be located so as to produce the
maximum load effects in the structural members. However, stair treads shall
be designed per OSHA regulations or building code as applicable.
3.2.6 Live load reductions shall be as permitted in ASCE 7. In addition, for process
manufacturing floor areas not used for storage, the live load reduction
permitted by ASCE 7 for lower live loads may be used.
3.2.7 The loadings on handrail and guardrail for process equipment structures
shall be per OSHA 1910. The loadings on handrail and guardrail for
buildings and structures under the jurisdiction of a building code shall be per
the building code.
3.3.4 Process equipment empty, operating, and test loads shall be considered as
dead loads (i.e., 1.4 load factor).
3.8.5 For piperacks supporting multiple pipes, 10 percent of the total piping
weight shall be taken as an estimated horizontal friction load applied only to
local supporting beams. However, an estimated friction load equal to 5
percent of the total piping weight shall be accumulated and carried into
piperack struts, columns, braced anchor frames, and foundations. Under
certain circumstances, engineering judgement should be used to determine if
a higher friction load should be used.
3.8.6 Pipe anchor and guide loads produced from thermal expansion, internal
pressure, and surge shall be considered as dead loads. Piperack beams, struts,
columns, braced anchor frames, and foundations shall be designed to resist
actual pipe anchor and guide loads. For local beam design, consider only the
top flange as acting in horizontal bending unless the pipe anchor engages
both flanges of the beam.
3.8.7 Estimated pipe friction loads (per Section 3.8.5) shall not be combined with
wind or seismic loads for the design of piperack struts, columns, braced
anchor frames, and foundations, when there are multiple frames. However,
anchor and guide loads (excluding their friction component) shall be
combined with wind or seismic loads.
bundle.
3.9.2 Bundle pull load shall have the same load factors as a live load. Due to the
short duration of bundle pull loading and ductility requirements of codes,
allowable stresses may be increased by 1/3, or load factors may be reduced
by a factor of 0.75 for load combination including bundle pull.
3.9.3 The portion of the bundle pull load at the sliding end support shall equal the
friction force or 1/2 the total bundle pull load, whichever is less. The
remainder of the bundle pull load shall be resisted at the anchor end support.
4. Load Combinations
4.1 General
Buildings, structures, equipment, and foundations shall be designed for the
appropriate load combinations from ASCE 7, local building codes, any other
applicable design codes and standards, and any other probable and realistic
combination of loads.
5. Structural Design
5.1 Steel
5.1.1 Steel design shall be in accordance with AISC ASD or AISC LRFD and AISI
specifications for cold-formed shapes. Bar joists shall be designed per SJI
specifications.
5.1.2 All bolted structural connections shall be ASTM A325-N, unless otherwise
required.
5.1.3 All welded structural connections shall use weld filler material conforming
to AWS D 1.1 Section 3.3 (including Table 3.1) with an electrode strength of
58 ksi (400 MPa) minimum yield strength and 70 ksi (480 MPa) tensile
strength, unless otherwise required.
5.2 Concrete
5.2.1 Concrete design shall be in accordance with ANSI/ACI 318 and ACI 350R
for liquid containing structures.
5.2.2 All reinforcing steel shall be per ASTM A615, Grade 60, deformed. ASTM
A706 material shall be permitted for reinforcing bars resisting earthquake or
blast induced forces. Plain wire conforming to ASTM A82 may be used for
spiral reinforcement. Welded wire fabric shall be per ASTM A185.
5.2.3 Precast and prestressed concrete shall be in accordance with the PCI Design
Handbook.
5.3 Masonry
Masonry design shall be in accordance with ACI 530/ASCE 5.
5.5.2 Vertical deflection of jib cranes shall not exceed L/225 (where L = the
maximum distance from the support column to load location along the length
of the jib beam) due to the maximum lifted plus hoist load(s), without
impact.
5.5.3 Lateral deflection of support runway girders for cranes with lateral moving
trolleys shall not exceed L/400 (where L = the span length) based on a total
crane lateral force not less than 20 percent of the sum of the weights of the
lifted load (without impact) and the crane trolley. The lateral force shall be
distributed to each runway girder with due regard for the lateral stiffness of
the runway girders and structure supporting the runway girders.
5.7 Foundations
5.7.1 Foundation design shall be based on the results of a geotechnical engineering
investigation.
5.7.2 The minimum factor of safety for overturning due to loads other than seismic
shall be 1.5.
5.7.3 The minimum factor of safety against sliding due to loads other than seismic
shall be 1.5. Friction and passive soil resistance, per the geotechnical report,
may both be considered as resisting sliding.
5.7.4 The minimum factor of safety against overturning and sliding due to seismic
loads shall be 1.0. For additional guidance, see Chapter 5 of ASCE Seismic
Guidelines.
5.7.5 The minimum factor of safety against buoyancy shall be 1.2.
5.7.6 Long term and differential settlement shall be considered when designing
foundations supporting interconnected, settlement-sensitive equipment or
piping systems.