DCBII
Structural
- Apr 15, 2010
- 187
Thoughts I've been pondering:
1. Shear-friction reinforcement must be developed for fy on both sides of a shear plane.
2. Minimum bar cover in CMU is typically 2.25" (1.25" face shell + 1/2" grout space).
3. Minimum development lengths for Grade 60 bars in CMU are as follows (f'm = 2000 psi assumed):
5. Anchor bolt connections to shear walls can provide only a fraction of even the thinnest concrete diaphragm's shear strength. If you doubt that run the numbers.
6. From point 3 above, the only bar that can be developed from a diaphragm into a 12" CMU shear wall is a #3.
Seems like concrete diaphragms and CMU shear walls don't mix. Open for discussion... I'll start:
Does wrapping the dowel hook around horizontal reinforcement count for anything? I know it's been discussed to death, but do we really need fy? There's still tensile strain in the bar, and hence compression and corresponding friction across the shear plane if we're at say 75% of fy.
1. Shear-friction reinforcement must be developed for fy on both sides of a shear plane.
2. Minimum bar cover in CMU is typically 2.25" (1.25" face shell + 1/2" grout space).
3. Minimum development lengths for Grade 60 bars in CMU are as follows (f'm = 2000 psi assumed):
a. #4 bar: 0.13db2fyγ/(K√f'm)-13db = 12.9"
b. #3 bar: 12" (code minimum ld) - 13db = 6.0"
4. Concrete diaphragms typically utilize shear friction to transfer loads to shear walls (see ACI 318-14 Fig. R12.5.3.7)5. Anchor bolt connections to shear walls can provide only a fraction of even the thinnest concrete diaphragm's shear strength. If you doubt that run the numbers.
6. From point 3 above, the only bar that can be developed from a diaphragm into a 12" CMU shear wall is a #3.
Seems like concrete diaphragms and CMU shear walls don't mix. Open for discussion... I'll start:
Does wrapping the dowel hook around horizontal reinforcement count for anything? I know it's been discussed to death, but do we really need fy? There's still tensile strain in the bar, and hence compression and corresponding friction across the shear plane if we're at say 75% of fy.