bugbus
Structural
- Aug 14, 2018
- 533
Something I've never really seen discussed before is the strength of a concrete slab subjected to a concentrated torque in its own plane.
The obvious failure mode (shown below) would be similar in a way to punching shear (similar in the sense that the failure surface is localised around the concentrated force), but the shear would be in the plane of the slab. I think this would be fairly easy to calculate by adapting current shear strength provisions in the codes.
But then I got thinking about another failure mode like the one shown below, which would be limited by the tensile strength of the slab. I suppose this is similar to the torsion strength of a beam in that the torsional cracks align with the principal compressive stresses and are crossed by reinforcement, which provide the strength.
Has anyone dealt with this situation before?
The obvious failure mode (shown below) would be similar in a way to punching shear (similar in the sense that the failure surface is localised around the concentrated force), but the shear would be in the plane of the slab. I think this would be fairly easy to calculate by adapting current shear strength provisions in the codes.

But then I got thinking about another failure mode like the one shown below, which would be limited by the tensile strength of the slab. I suppose this is similar to the torsion strength of a beam in that the torsional cracks align with the principal compressive stresses and are crossed by reinforcement, which provide the strength.

Has anyone dealt with this situation before?