Structural Steel Designer's HandBook: AISC, AASHTO, AISI, ASTM, AREMA, and ASCE-07 Design Standards, Fourth Edition

Daniel A. Cuoco, P.E.
President
Thornton-Tomasetti Group, Inc.
New York, New York
Structural steel framing provides designers with a wide selection of economical systems for floor and roof construction. Steel framing can achieve longer spans more efficiently than other types of construction. This minimizes the number of columns and footings thereby increasing speed of erection. Longer spans also provide more flexibility for interior-space planning.
Another advantage of steel construction is its ability to readily accommodate future structural modifications, such as openings for tenants stairs and changes for heavier floor loadings. When reinforcement of existing steel structures is required, it can be accomplished by such measures as addition of framing members connected to existing members and field welding of additional steel plates to strengthen existing members.
The most common types of floor-deck systems currently used with structural steel construction are concrete fill on metal deck, precast-concrete planks, and cast-in-place concrete slabs.
The most prevalent type of floor deck used with steel frames is concrete fill on metal deck. The metal deck consists of cold-formed profiles made from steel sheet, usually having a specified minimum yield strength of at least 33 ksi, with 40 ksi becoming more common. Design requirements for metal deck are contained in the American Iron and Steel Institute s North American Specification for the Design of Cold-Formed Steel Structural Members. (See Chap. 9.)
The concrete fill is usually specified to have a 28-day compressive strength of at least 3000 psi. Requirements...