Leftwow said:
If the corner stress exceeds the bearing capacity shouldn't we expect the soil to fail? I am trying to understand your argument.
I'll assume that you're speaking to my arguments above.
Were it the case that over-stressed soil would start flying out the side of the footing and wreaking havoc the instant that allowable stresses were exceeded, I would ensure that they were never exceeded. However, for the vast majority of projects that I've worked on, the allowable soil stress was chosen not to preclude failure but, rather, to limit settlement. And that implies a material capable of additional deformation before a true strength limit state failure would occur
When geotechnical engineers give us the allowable soil bearing stress, it is often a value that was calculated assuming a uniform pressure beneath some size of foundation element. And it was a value calculated with a particular value of settlement in mind, say one inch. Now, if you have a footing with overturning where the the peak allowable stress reaches the max allowable bearing stress at only one point, will you see that one inch of settlement? You will not. That's why, in these cases, I'm comfortable using a uniform soil stress distribution that would produce one inch of settlement.
I encounter this most often in the design of shear wall footings for taller structures. I call up the geotechical engineer to ask if I can do this, they say yes, and I carry on. Were I stuck never exceeding the allowable soil stress beneath these footings, they would become quite enormous.
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.