MontrealEng
Structural
- Mar 7, 2011
- 7
I'm hoping someone can help me with this. The attached drawing will help get your mind around my situation.
I'm designing the base of a fix-free column (moment connection via base-plate on the existing slab).
Because I have a large moment acting on the base-plate, I am concerned with failure of one-way shear in the existing concrete slab. I am testing that the shear resistance of the concrete (Vc) against the one way shear acting on the slab (Vf), (ie: Vc needs to be > Vf). I know that the one way shear plane is located at d/2 from the edge of the baseplate.
Question is: How do I find what Vf is? Do I take some specified tributary area (as outlined by the outermost dashed line on my graphic), before calculating my stress distribution, just as I would when designing a spread footing? What do you think?
The small issues always take the most amount of time...
Thanks,
Carl, ing. jr.
Montreal, QC
I'm designing the base of a fix-free column (moment connection via base-plate on the existing slab).
Because I have a large moment acting on the base-plate, I am concerned with failure of one-way shear in the existing concrete slab. I am testing that the shear resistance of the concrete (Vc) against the one way shear acting on the slab (Vf), (ie: Vc needs to be > Vf). I know that the one way shear plane is located at d/2 from the edge of the baseplate.
Question is: How do I find what Vf is? Do I take some specified tributary area (as outlined by the outermost dashed line on my graphic), before calculating my stress distribution, just as I would when designing a spread footing? What do you think?
The small issues always take the most amount of time...
Thanks,
Carl, ing. jr.
Montreal, QC