haceng
Structural
- Dec 18, 2009
- 7
thread167-245165
I'm from the UK and there is little guidance on this here. In the case where you have an opening corner, the rebar on the inside face will be resisting the bending and all of the tension. Therefore it is reasonable to assume the support is being provided at that location (not at the face)by the rebar. If you superimpose a shear crack line patern (adjusted so the support lines up with the rebar), you will see that it is quite reasonable to use the same rules for distance from the support as you do for a compressive support(d to ACI but 2d to BS8110 and EC2 but see following). In this case d should be the distance between the top and bottom reinf not the effective depth. BS8110 and EC2 differ at (av < 2d) from the support. BS8110 factors the CAPACITY by 2d / av, whereas EC2 factors the ADDITIONAL SHEAR by av/2d between 2d and 0.5d and by 0.25 closer than 0.5d. For a linearly varying increase in shear from 2d to the support the EC2 method results in a value at the support which is slightly over the value you would get at d which is quite conveniently similar to the ACI check position! You could also consider the rebar from the supporting wall as a shear leg and then check at d from there.
If you have a situation where the moment is small, the support will be shared by the rebars on both faces and the support will be on the centre line of the wall so the check position moves closer to the face. The check position will only be at the face if the support is taken as being at the far(outer)rebar which can only happen with a closing moment. Therefore, I believe those diagrams which show the failure point to be a 45 degree line between the corners are not appropriate to design case we normally see in tanks.
You must reduce the shear capacity as a result of any tension. BS8110 does not allow you to combine adjustment due to axial with closer than 2d factors but I believe that should apply to compression only as tension REDUCES the capacity but will not alter the shear line pattern, especialy as the tension is taken by the rebar and generally only increases the rebar stress by 15% say. EC2 does allow combination of effects.
I'm from the UK and there is little guidance on this here. In the case where you have an opening corner, the rebar on the inside face will be resisting the bending and all of the tension. Therefore it is reasonable to assume the support is being provided at that location (not at the face)by the rebar. If you superimpose a shear crack line patern (adjusted so the support lines up with the rebar), you will see that it is quite reasonable to use the same rules for distance from the support as you do for a compressive support(d to ACI but 2d to BS8110 and EC2 but see following). In this case d should be the distance between the top and bottom reinf not the effective depth. BS8110 and EC2 differ at (av < 2d) from the support. BS8110 factors the CAPACITY by 2d / av, whereas EC2 factors the ADDITIONAL SHEAR by av/2d between 2d and 0.5d and by 0.25 closer than 0.5d. For a linearly varying increase in shear from 2d to the support the EC2 method results in a value at the support which is slightly over the value you would get at d which is quite conveniently similar to the ACI check position! You could also consider the rebar from the supporting wall as a shear leg and then check at d from there.
If you have a situation where the moment is small, the support will be shared by the rebars on both faces and the support will be on the centre line of the wall so the check position moves closer to the face. The check position will only be at the face if the support is taken as being at the far(outer)rebar which can only happen with a closing moment. Therefore, I believe those diagrams which show the failure point to be a 45 degree line between the corners are not appropriate to design case we normally see in tanks.
You must reduce the shear capacity as a result of any tension. BS8110 does not allow you to combine adjustment due to axial with closer than 2d factors but I believe that should apply to compression only as tension REDUCES the capacity but will not alter the shear line pattern, especialy as the tension is taken by the rebar and generally only increases the rebar stress by 15% say. EC2 does allow combination of effects.