brandonl
Structural
- Dec 19, 2003
- 12
Situation - 8" (min.) thick continuously reinforced concrete slab used to pave a drainage channel. Channel section is trapezoidal with 12' wide bottom and 7ft. deep. The reinforcing steel (#5 @8" longitudinal, #4@16" transverse) was placed too low in the slab. Bottom cover is thus around 1". Slab thicknesse vary from the 8" minimum up to as much as 11 inches thick. The result is that the concrete cover over the rebar to the top surface is on the order of 6 to 8 inches.
I know intuitively that the rebar is not going to provide the proper crack control to the top surface of the slab, but have been unable to find any literature or publications that have examined this effect (or lack of it). Typically the steel should be placed at 1/3 to 1/2 the depth of the slab. Does anyone know at what depth in a slab on grade such as this that the reinforcing steel becomes worthless as a crack control agent?
I know intuitively that the rebar is not going to provide the proper crack control to the top surface of the slab, but have been unable to find any literature or publications that have examined this effect (or lack of it). Typically the steel should be placed at 1/3 to 1/2 the depth of the slab. Does anyone know at what depth in a slab on grade such as this that the reinforcing steel becomes worthless as a crack control agent?