rceng
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 16, 2006
- 5
I am designing a concrete basement wall to be backfilled without support at the top, acting as a plate simply supported at the bottom by a slab and at it's ends by perpendicular walls. Using RISA-3D to analyze a plate element model I find that I can reinforce for the maximum vertical and horizontal moments, but I'm concerned about the possibility of a shear failure at the plan corners. If I fix the cormers the negative moments become impractically large without much reduction in the positive moments, and in any case the corner rotation due to warping of the perpendicular walls would be impossible to predict. So I thought I would use some bars on the soil side at the corners to limit crack width and provide some degree of rotational restraint, but still reinforce mid-span for the simply supported condition. I can check shear-friction capacity using these soil side bars and the opposite side bars which will be extended around the corner. Question: is this really an appropriate use of shear-friction? Because I am not reinforcing for the maximum moment but allowing some rotation, does this negate the shear-friction model? Also, is there a way to account for dowel action of the inside face bars? Any comments would be greatly appreciated.