cozanostra
Structural
- Mar 4, 2009
- 1
Hi,
it seems that not many have attempted to apporach this issue but when designing a concrete basement wall or an underground concrete tank, the simplest approach i know is to use the PCA-published moment and shear coefficients or FEM it. Now the question is it all depends on on the fixity we assume. So far I examine both fixed and pinned conditions and pick the worst case , but i have a feeling that im making the design too conservative. Any thoughts on this?
Eg. lets say i have a 20ft long basement wall supported on piles below and at the ends by prependicular walls, as well as a conc floor at the bottom. There are quite a few fixity combinations we can make between all 3 sides. Is there a "prevailing" boundary condition for each side that we can pick beeing closer to reality?
it seems that not many have attempted to apporach this issue but when designing a concrete basement wall or an underground concrete tank, the simplest approach i know is to use the PCA-published moment and shear coefficients or FEM it. Now the question is it all depends on on the fixity we assume. So far I examine both fixed and pinned conditions and pick the worst case , but i have a feeling that im making the design too conservative. Any thoughts on this?
Eg. lets say i have a 20ft long basement wall supported on piles below and at the ends by prependicular walls, as well as a conc floor at the bottom. There are quite a few fixity combinations we can make between all 3 sides. Is there a "prevailing" boundary condition for each side that we can pick beeing closer to reality?