Kilgore
Structural
- Feb 19, 2002
- 3
One of my fellow engineers wants to place a 75-kip concentrated load on our 250 psf-rated floor. At first, I thought it unwise (okay, downright stupid) to load to 300 times the rating, but then I ran a column punching shear calc and found it to be plenty strong. Can this be true?
Here are the numbers:
Load is placed on a 1’ x 1’ bearing pad
8” thick slab on grade – 3” cover = 5” to bars (assume #4@12” is sufficient reinforcement)
f’c=4000 psi, soil bearing=3000psf,
So, the shear cone spreads to 12” + 2.5” + 2.5” = 17” (square). At 3000 psf, the soil can take 6.0 kips (already huge compared to 250 lb for 1 sq ft of load)
The surface area of the shear cone is 17” x 4 sides x 5” = 340 in2
Shear strength is 4 x sqrt(f’c) = 253 psi, so the concrete can resist another 86 kips.
So, our 250 lb/ft2 floor can take a 92000 lb load on 1 square foot. Bearing is fine. Are slabs always this strong? Is there some failure mode I’m forgetting?
Here are the numbers:
Load is placed on a 1’ x 1’ bearing pad
8” thick slab on grade – 3” cover = 5” to bars (assume #4@12” is sufficient reinforcement)
f’c=4000 psi, soil bearing=3000psf,
So, the shear cone spreads to 12” + 2.5” + 2.5” = 17” (square). At 3000 psf, the soil can take 6.0 kips (already huge compared to 250 lb for 1 sq ft of load)
The surface area of the shear cone is 17” x 4 sides x 5” = 340 in2
Shear strength is 4 x sqrt(f’c) = 253 psi, so the concrete can resist another 86 kips.
So, our 250 lb/ft2 floor can take a 92000 lb load on 1 square foot. Bearing is fine. Are slabs always this strong? Is there some failure mode I’m forgetting?