mats12
Geotechnical
- Dec 17, 2016
- 181
Hello guys.
If I have a column supported on a reinf. concrete slab I may have a punching shear problem. I can solve this by making a bigger column cross section dimensions or by making a thicker slab.
What I want to discuss is what happens if I add a beam that is partly integrated with a slab. Does this mean that punching shear of a slab is no longer an issue since shear forces are taken care by a beam? Is there a possibilty of shear along the beam (between the beam and a slab). For this to happen I suspect that deflection of a beam should be huge or that load on a slab is really big.
To make it short - by adding a RC beam bellow a column, we dont have to worry about a slab punching shear any longer? Everything depends on shear resistence of a beam?
If I have a column supported on a reinf. concrete slab I may have a punching shear problem. I can solve this by making a bigger column cross section dimensions or by making a thicker slab.
What I want to discuss is what happens if I add a beam that is partly integrated with a slab. Does this mean that punching shear of a slab is no longer an issue since shear forces are taken care by a beam? Is there a possibilty of shear along the beam (between the beam and a slab). For this to happen I suspect that deflection of a beam should be huge or that load on a slab is really big.
To make it short - by adding a RC beam bellow a column, we dont have to worry about a slab punching shear any longer? Everything depends on shear resistence of a beam?
