pricklyPete
Structural
- May 14, 2004
- 25
Does any know, at a slab on grade, how much a vapor barrier above or below the sand cushion affects the coefficient of (sliding) friction between the bottom of the slab and the soil. I would assume it would be detrimental.
To make a long story short, I have a block foundation wall which has the S.O.G. at 100-0 on the interior side and the grade is down at about 91-0 on the exterior. Therefore I am retaining a pretty good amount of soil, which means that I have to deal with a calculated 1000 plf horizontal reaction at the top of the wall. This reaction has to be resisted by the slab. If I have a 4" S.O.G. weighing 50 psf and I use a coefficient of sliding friction of 0.40 I would need 50 feet of slab per linear foot to resist this load. I could probably do this if the contractor doesn't discontinue the mesh at the control joints. Any thoughts on how I might be better able to deal with that reaction going into the slab? (Note: I am treating the wall as fixed at the base and pinned at the top, so I have already attempted to reduce the top reaction in that way. Also, the length of the wall is 70' so I can't try to span horizontally between the side walls. Finally, cantilevering the wall up is not an option either for various reasons)
To make a long story short, I have a block foundation wall which has the S.O.G. at 100-0 on the interior side and the grade is down at about 91-0 on the exterior. Therefore I am retaining a pretty good amount of soil, which means that I have to deal with a calculated 1000 plf horizontal reaction at the top of the wall. This reaction has to be resisted by the slab. If I have a 4" S.O.G. weighing 50 psf and I use a coefficient of sliding friction of 0.40 I would need 50 feet of slab per linear foot to resist this load. I could probably do this if the contractor doesn't discontinue the mesh at the control joints. Any thoughts on how I might be better able to deal with that reaction going into the slab? (Note: I am treating the wall as fixed at the base and pinned at the top, so I have already attempted to reduce the top reaction in that way. Also, the length of the wall is 70' so I can't try to span horizontally between the side walls. Finally, cantilevering the wall up is not an option either for various reasons)