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pressure on a inclined surface

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lavecchiasignora

Structural
Joined
Mar 3, 2011
Messages
48
Location
SE
Hi all!

I have a ''wall'' which is 58 degrees from the horizontal plane and it is said that a force of 200kN shall be applied horizontally on that wall surface according to a standard, i.e. the force is in 0 degree direction and the wall is in 58 degree direction.

My question is then if I want to apply a pressure on that wall which shall correspond to the force of 200kN, how should I do? I cannot just take force / area because the force is not perpendicular to the area, i.e. it is not normal to the wall.

Thank you
 
If the sloping height of the wall is 'h' the vertical height is h*sin58 = 0.85h.

A force of 200 kN applied horizontally is equivalent to a horizontal pressure of 200/(0.85*h*w) = 286/(h.w) where w is the width of wall.

If you want to apply a normal pressure to the wall such that the horizontal component is 200 kN, the normal pressure is 286/(h.w) and the vertical component is 200*tan58 = 125 kN.

Don't forget that any soil lying above the sloping wall produces a variable downward pressure on the wall. It varies from [γ]z to 0 where z is the maximum depth of fill and [γ] is the unit weight of soil.

BA
 
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