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CSA S16:19NBCC 2015

Steel Member (Design Only)

Member reactions link to connected column or footing calculations automatically - change a load and everything downstream updates. Built for Canadian structural engineers who already have analysis results and need fast capacity checks to CSA S16:19. Checks combined axial plus bending interaction, lateral-torsional buckling, and flexural buckling using Canadian wide-flange, HSS, and other standard sections.

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What it calculates

Member reactions link to connected column or footing calculations automatically - change a load and everything downstream updates. Design steel members to CSA S16:19 with combined axial and bending interaction, lateral-torsional buckling, and flexural buckling checks. Handles W-shapes, HSS, pipes, channels, and angles from the Canadian section library.

Code standards

  • CSA S16:19
  • NBCC 2015

How it calculates

The Steel Member (Design Only) calculator to CSA S16:19 accepts factored design forces and runs all limit states resistance checks for the selected Canadian steel section under combined loading.

Section classification

Section class is determined from the plate element slenderness ratios for the flanges and web (CSA S16 Table 1). Class 1 (plastic), Class 2 (compact), Class 3 (non-compact), and Class 4 (slender) sections are identified. Class 1 sections can develop the full plastic moment. Class 2 sections reach but cannot maintain plastic moment under rotation. Class 3 sections are limited to first yield. Class 4 sections are not supported in this version and will return a failing result if selected.

Flexural resistance and lateral-torsional buckling

Clause 13.6 governs flexural resistance. The plastic moment capacity Mp = Z × Fy is the upper limit for Class 1 and 2 sections. Lateral-torsional buckling reduces the moment resistance when the unbraced length exceeds the yield moment boundary. The factored moment resistance Mr is:

  • Class 1 and 2, short segments: Mr = φ × Mp (no LTB)
  • Inelastic LTB range: Mr = 1.15 × φ × Mp × (1 - 0.28 × Mp/Mu) ≤ φ × Mp
  • Elastic LTB: Mr = φ × Mu

Where Mu is the elastic critical moment computed from the unbraced length, section torsional properties (J and Cw), and the moment gradient factor ω2. The ω2 factor accounts for non-uniform bending moment along the unbraced segment, increasing the effective moment resistance where the moment diagram is non-uniform.

For loads applied above the shear centre (top flange loading), the load height adjustment from Cl. 13.6.1 reduces the elastic critical moment. This is activated by a user input.

Compressive resistance and column buckling

Clause 13.3 covers compressive resistance. The factored compressive resistance Cr depends on the slenderness ratio KL/r for each axis, yielding stress Fy, and the column curve parameter n (n = 1.34 for hot-rolled sections, n = 2.24 for welded sections). The governing slenderness ratio is used to compute the normalized slenderness λ:

λ = (KL/r) × sqrt(Fy / (π² × E))

Cr = φ × Ag × Fy × (1 + λ^(2n))^(-1/n)

For sections with one axis of symmetry (tees, channels), torsional-flexural buckling replaces simple flexural buckling and a modified effective slenderness ratio is used.

Combined actions interaction

Clause 13.8 interaction equations are the primary output. For members under combined axial compression and bending:

interaction ratio = Cf/Cr + (0.85 × U1x × Mfx/Mrx) + (β × U1y × Mfy/Mry) ≤ 1.0

Where Cf is the factored compressive force, Mfx and Mfy are factored moments, Mrx and Mry are the factored moment resistances (including LTB), U1x and U1y are moment amplification factors for P-delta effects within the member, and β equals 0.6 for I-shaped and T-shaped sections or 0.85 for box sections. Both the cross-section (Clause 13.8.2) and member stability (Clause 13.8.3) interaction equations are checked and the governing interaction ratio is reported.

Shear resistance

Clause 13.4 governs shear. The factored shear resistance Vr = φ × Aw × 0.66 × Fy for compact webs. For slender webs, shear buckling reduces Vr via the shear buckling parameter.

Tension resistance

Clause 13.2 covers tension. The calculator checks gross cross-section yielding (Tr = φ × Ag × Fy) and, where applicable, net section fracture (Tr = φu × Ane × Fu). Both limit states are evaluated and the lower controls.

What engineers say

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Richard Faulkner

Senior Structural Engineer, Kusch Consulting Engineers

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The load linking feature is huge for us. Before, we had to use separate calculators and manually input everything.

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Engineering Design Coordinator, PWI

Frequently asked questions

What design code does this calculator use?
This calculator uses CSA S16:19, the 2019 edition of the Canadian standard for the design of steel structures. Load combinations reference NBCC 2015. Members are designed using limit states design (LSD), which is the Canadian equivalent of LRFD.
What are the key inputs?
You provide the steel section (Canadian W, HSS, pipe, channel, or angle), member length, effective length factors or unbraced lengths for each axis, and the factored design forces - axial load, major- and minor-axis bending moments, and shear. Forces can be manually entered or linked from an upstream analysis calculator. A range of presets reduces repetitive data entry for common member types.
What limit states does it check?
The calculator checks flexural capacity including lateral-torsional buckling (CSA S16 Clause 13.6), compressive resistance including flexural buckling (Clause 13.3), tensile resistance (Clause 13.2), shear resistance (Clause 13.4), and the combined axial plus bending interaction equations from Clause 13.8. Class 4 (slender) sections are not supported.
Can it handle combined axial load and biaxial bending?
Yes. The Clause 13.8 interaction equations handle members under simultaneous axial force and bending about one or both axes. Both the strong-axis and weak-axis interaction ratios are evaluated and the controlling value is reported with the code reference.
How do I set the effective length and unbraced length?
You enter effective length factors for strong- and weak-axis buckling and the unbraced length for lateral-torsional buckling. The member is assumed to be part of a braced frame. Loads are assumed to be applied at or away from the shear centre; the load height adjustment from CSA S16 Cl. 13.6.1 can be activated if loads are applied at the top flange.
Can this member calculation link to beam and footing calculations?
Yes - the member calc receives reactions from upstream calculations (e.g. frame analysis) and passes base reactions to footing or base plate calculations. Changes propagate automatically through the load path.

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