Skinnattittar
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 23, 2015
- 23
Well this one is a doozey to me.
Attached, on the left, you'll see a rough diagram of a concrete well cap, 19ft exterior diameter, 16ft interior diameter. There are an assortment of different openings that have to be cast into the cap. Very heavy loads will be put over these openings, about 20,000# (total) plus additional 100psf live load for maintenance. That cap will be a total of 4ft 2in thick (50 inches).
My job? The engineer of record did not appreciate that this thing has to built! Due to site and use considerations, there is no actual ability to build the slab, in place, as they show it. At least, according to the contractor. So I have been tasked by my boss to design a slab that will be cast on site (but not in place), that will be lifted onto the well, then the rest of the concrete will be poured over.
The hurdles? All the holes shown in the diagram have to be cast into the cap. The contractor wants to wait as little as possible for the cap to cure before lifting and installing. The weight has to be kept to a bare minimum because of site access issues.
My approach; the right side diagram shows the cap with two hatched regions and some dotted lines. The dotted lines represent two beams, I would like to consider as the primary supporting structures in the cap. The hatched one on the right is just for clarity. The hatched blob of a zone on the left side is my assumed tributary area (I can probably dock the ends a bit, but we'll go with this diagram for now). Trying to get down to 12" thick.
My question; is this a reasonable approach? I've designed slabs before, with small perforations, but this one is pretty chopped up as far as I'm concerned. Another issue is that it may not be given 28 days to cure. Also, it will be done in the field, as in, not at a concrete plant, so I'm not sure how that effects things. The only concrete I've dealt with that is loaded prior to curing is as foundation walls, compression only, and then only very lightly loaded. Can you load un-cured concrete in flexure? Do I just dial back my concrete strength 50% for a 7 day cure? Are there any good resources for slabs with large holes?
Additional details; the project is for a municipal water supply, so there are special requirements for the concrete. The locations of the openings are not negotiable due to... I dunno, the contractor doesn't want to deal with it and the EoR is disinterested? Obviously there's good reason for some but I don't know them, so they're fixed in place.
Attached, on the left, you'll see a rough diagram of a concrete well cap, 19ft exterior diameter, 16ft interior diameter. There are an assortment of different openings that have to be cast into the cap. Very heavy loads will be put over these openings, about 20,000# (total) plus additional 100psf live load for maintenance. That cap will be a total of 4ft 2in thick (50 inches).
My job? The engineer of record did not appreciate that this thing has to built! Due to site and use considerations, there is no actual ability to build the slab, in place, as they show it. At least, according to the contractor. So I have been tasked by my boss to design a slab that will be cast on site (but not in place), that will be lifted onto the well, then the rest of the concrete will be poured over.
The hurdles? All the holes shown in the diagram have to be cast into the cap. The contractor wants to wait as little as possible for the cap to cure before lifting and installing. The weight has to be kept to a bare minimum because of site access issues.
My approach; the right side diagram shows the cap with two hatched regions and some dotted lines. The dotted lines represent two beams, I would like to consider as the primary supporting structures in the cap. The hatched one on the right is just for clarity. The hatched blob of a zone on the left side is my assumed tributary area (I can probably dock the ends a bit, but we'll go with this diagram for now). Trying to get down to 12" thick.
My question; is this a reasonable approach? I've designed slabs before, with small perforations, but this one is pretty chopped up as far as I'm concerned. Another issue is that it may not be given 28 days to cure. Also, it will be done in the field, as in, not at a concrete plant, so I'm not sure how that effects things. The only concrete I've dealt with that is loaded prior to curing is as foundation walls, compression only, and then only very lightly loaded. Can you load un-cured concrete in flexure? Do I just dial back my concrete strength 50% for a 7 day cure? Are there any good resources for slabs with large holes?
Additional details; the project is for a municipal water supply, so there are special requirements for the concrete. The locations of the openings are not negotiable due to... I dunno, the contractor doesn't want to deal with it and the EoR is disinterested? Obviously there's good reason for some but I don't know them, so they're fixed in place.