HeavyCivil
Structural
- Aug 5, 2009
- 184
In detailing a concrete tank with a 12" deep mat foundation I received mark ups instructing me to "key" the wall into the mat. I assume this is for shear transfer, and I have seen this done in the field (not in design, but I am new to design so go figure).
The problem I see is that if I key walls into mat, say, 3.5" which works well for obvious forming reasons, then the 12" waterstop I've been instructed to use goes into mat 9.5" and causes big time interference with my top layer of mat reinforcing. At that point the top bars might as well be cut because they will be at the same location as the bottom layer if they are bent to accommodate water stop.
They could be bend around a 9" waterstop I suppose but the same basic problem still exists if using a key.
If the mat is poured flat, with no key, and the joint area is roughened to a spec'd amplitude the top bar can be bent to accommodate waterstop much more easily. - Still, at that point, 6" bellow the surface I don't think it will be doing much for crack control and I'm hoping it wont need to do much for negative bending.
The question is this: are shear keys necessary for liquid retaining tanks (in this case the wall is only 8' tall but I'm also curious in general. I have checked shear based on base thickness and it is fine- but I'm afraid the basic shear calc does not assume there is a joint there).
The other question is why was I instructed to use a 12" waterstop when 9" seems like the standard...
The final question is, if a key is needed, the top bar perpendicular to the WS can be cut or does need to bend around it.
Thank you
The problem I see is that if I key walls into mat, say, 3.5" which works well for obvious forming reasons, then the 12" waterstop I've been instructed to use goes into mat 9.5" and causes big time interference with my top layer of mat reinforcing. At that point the top bars might as well be cut because they will be at the same location as the bottom layer if they are bent to accommodate water stop.
They could be bend around a 9" waterstop I suppose but the same basic problem still exists if using a key.
If the mat is poured flat, with no key, and the joint area is roughened to a spec'd amplitude the top bar can be bent to accommodate waterstop much more easily. - Still, at that point, 6" bellow the surface I don't think it will be doing much for crack control and I'm hoping it wont need to do much for negative bending.
The question is this: are shear keys necessary for liquid retaining tanks (in this case the wall is only 8' tall but I'm also curious in general. I have checked shear based on base thickness and it is fine- but I'm afraid the basic shear calc does not assume there is a joint there).
The other question is why was I instructed to use a 12" waterstop when 9" seems like the standard...
The final question is, if a key is needed, the top bar perpendicular to the WS can be cut or does need to bend around it.
Thank you