onsiteeng
Structural
- Sep 2, 2009
- 14
Good Day,
We have a client whose composite slab has been compromised by the wheel action of a forklift(8000lb loaded- approximate 3000lb on front small hard plastic wheels). The slab is 3" CFD with 1.5" cover over the deck. The deck spans 5ft onto I beams. There does not appear to be mesh in the slab but 1/2" bars appear to have been placed at 6" centres perpendicular to the flutes. The rebar was placed directly onto the top flute. A couple of things immediately come to mind 1) The thickness of the concrete cover does provide a I hour fire rating. 2) the concrete cover is insufficient around the reinforcing to make it effective. 3)The floor is very bouncy - vibration analysis required. 4)The forklift point load appears to be cracking the thin section of concrete and there appears to be a regular pattern of cracks running along the flutes. 5) It also appears to be cracking over the rebar where there is only around 1" cover. 6)We assume the only thing really supporting the slab is the 3" of concrete in the flutes which appears to be uncracked and the reinforcing bars which is spanning between.
Any suggestions on the best way to fix this problem. The obvious is remove the top layer of concrete and pour a 3.5" cover slab over the top. The issue I have would be the bond between old and new concrete. We would also place a mat of 3/8" rebar at 12" c/c in the new section of slab. of course we would have to check the steel framing for the increased dead load.
Thanks
We have a client whose composite slab has been compromised by the wheel action of a forklift(8000lb loaded- approximate 3000lb on front small hard plastic wheels). The slab is 3" CFD with 1.5" cover over the deck. The deck spans 5ft onto I beams. There does not appear to be mesh in the slab but 1/2" bars appear to have been placed at 6" centres perpendicular to the flutes. The rebar was placed directly onto the top flute. A couple of things immediately come to mind 1) The thickness of the concrete cover does provide a I hour fire rating. 2) the concrete cover is insufficient around the reinforcing to make it effective. 3)The floor is very bouncy - vibration analysis required. 4)The forklift point load appears to be cracking the thin section of concrete and there appears to be a regular pattern of cracks running along the flutes. 5) It also appears to be cracking over the rebar where there is only around 1" cover. 6)We assume the only thing really supporting the slab is the 3" of concrete in the flutes which appears to be uncracked and the reinforcing bars which is spanning between.
Any suggestions on the best way to fix this problem. The obvious is remove the top layer of concrete and pour a 3.5" cover slab over the top. The issue I have would be the bond between old and new concrete. We would also place a mat of 3/8" rebar at 12" c/c in the new section of slab. of course we would have to check the steel framing for the increased dead load.
Thanks