Paddington said:
I believe that it is important that KootK prove to his own satisfaction that the combined shear case is not real, he should not just take our words for it.
I still wholeheartedly believe in the combined punching shear check (#2). I only stopped selling it because it became clear that others were not being persuaded by my arguments.
Rapt said:
In my younger days I would often check this as a shear friction case as well
Thanks for your excellent comments Rapt. This is very interesting as you are the first poster to validate check #3 at the top. I agree. Where the shear becomes a strut and tie situation rather than a diagonal tension situation, I think that shear friction warrants attention. In one of my previous threads, I pitched a theory that shear friction is self-satisfying in these scenarios without the need for rebar (
Link).
snowmachine said:
T would add the capacity from a 3-sided 2-way shear check to the capacity for the 1-way shear between the columns. Check whichever column has the higher 2-way shear stresses and place the 1-way shear failure line half-way between the columns. With this method you would need to use capital Vu and Vc since you need the whole perimeter to breakout for a failure. Based on this, you no longer need to check 1-way shear when the capacity of your Vc from the 3-sided 2-way shear plus 1 way shear capacity exceed the shear capacity of the 2-way shear for a single column.
This touches on an important point that I've been wondering about as well. We all seem to agree that it's not appropriate to perform the one way shear check using the entire width of slab. However, does one way shear failure over the shorter width proposed constitute failure on its own? Or can that one way capacity be combined with the three sided punching shear capacity as you have proposed? I'm really not sure. I worry that the one way shear failure would initiate an unzipping failure around the two way perimeter and, thus, the one and two way shear capacities would not be additive. Unzipping aside, is it even correct to combine one and two way shear capacities? Allowable stresses for two way shear are in excess of twice the values for one way shear. This may be because, as Rapt suggested above, punching shear is more of a "direct shear" situation (i.e. shear through a compression strut).
snowmachine said:
I would check situation 2 as well since adding a beam within the slab between the columns would be of no benefit in this situation.
Yes! Finally, an advocate for the combined punching shear check (#2)! I agree completely and should have thought of this argument myself. The one way shear resisting beam element envisioned, on it's own, does
nothing to resolve the P x e rotation problem. The rotation of the combined perimeter encompassing both columns can only be addressed through slab moments and/or eccentric shear around the combined shear perimeter (effectively torsion when the stresses are taken in aggregate).
snowmachine said:
A word of note in ACI 318 Art. 13.5 you can use Direct Design of slabs if columns are offset by up to .1L. I believe that is more of a rule of thumb than justification to say all your "close column" concerns can be ignored because by the time you get an offset of .1L you are in the realm of flexure/shear controlling.
I believe that provision pertains to column offsets in plan rather than elevation.
snowmachine said:
For #4, I have never seen bearing stresses control unless the column is a different concrete strength than the slab.
Agreed. My concern was that, in addition to the column f'c potentially being higher, the column may also use the rebar to transmit compression. I believe that it breaks down into two cases:
1) At thick lower level transfer slabs, column bars can be developed in compression and bearing isn't generally an issue.
2) At thin upper level slabs, column rebar likely cannot be developed in compression. However, were a column loaded heavily enough for this to be a concern at a thin upper floor slab, other failure modes would surely precede a bearing failure. As such, a bearing check is moot.
The greatest trick that bond stress ever pulled was convincing the world it didn't exist.