lak20016 said:
in the case that we have a shear wall connected to a thick mat, should the vertical reiorcment round the corner or not?
I forgot to respond to this bit of your question. For out of plane wall moment, I would say yes, the rebar generally should round the corner. For in plane "wall shear" moment, the problem is more one of rebar tension anchorage rather than transferring moment around the joint. In that case, rounding the corner with more bar extension than a standard hook would generally be unnecessary. All that said, there's usually more than one way to accomplish any particular goal in structural engineering. The sketch below, taken from MacGregor's text is basically the situation that you describe for out of plane wall moments. Just rotate the diagrams 180 degrees.
teguci said:
In addition to the development requirement, ld, ACI 318-11 12.10.3 requires developing the reinforcement at least a distance of "d" past where it is needed. In this case, d is for the wall and effectively requires the wall reinforcement to extend at least about the width of the wall into the footing. Further, if the shear is close to the concrete shear capacity in the footing or slab, then the flexural reinforcement is not allowed to be cut-off in the tension zone (12.10.5)
In my opinion, these sectional method design requirements could be waived for a member designed via strut and tie and satisfying the various anchorage requirements associated with that method. In all likelihood, of course, the STM anchorage requirements would be
more severe.
teguci said:
Below is my attempt to show why tension around the bend doesn't exist for the open corner condition. The tension in the reinforcement is effectively 0 when it gets to the hook/bend.
1) Just to clarify, this argument would only apply to the case where there is no footing toe extension beyond the wall. With the toe extension, I believe that it's a different story and there is definitely tension force in the bar as it rounds the corner.
2) For the joint that you drew, and presented macroscopically, I would agree that there is no force in the bars around the bend. However, research (some quoted above) has clearly demonstrated that having hooks, hoops and such drastically improves the performance of such joints. Logically, that could not be the case if there was no "tension around the bend". The tension around the bend is a static necessity for rebar details like this to perform.
I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.