sidnum
Structural
- Jul 14, 2008
- 13
Hi,
I am trying to design the base slab of a water retaining tank. The tank is above ground and the only loading on it is from the retained height of water. The tank measures 5m by 6m by 4m deep, with a freeboard of 500mm. The moments and shears in the walls have been worked out using two way slab theory (table 2.78 of Reynolds reinf. conc. handbook, if anybody is familiar with it)
The wall and base slab are to be designed for full fixity.
Can I carry the moment at the base of the wall into the edge of the slab, like it is a portal frame?
How do I work out the moment in the centre of the tank, if any?
I tried looking at this like an inverted T cantilever retaining wall and work out the moments at the base due to bearing pressure. However as there is no over-turning moment (O/T moments from water cancel each other) there is an average uniform bearing pressure of Total load over area. This seems too simple?
Any help or references to other sources would be great.
I should add, I work for a small office and we don't have any FEM software, so this needs to be hand checked.
I am trying to design the base slab of a water retaining tank. The tank is above ground and the only loading on it is from the retained height of water. The tank measures 5m by 6m by 4m deep, with a freeboard of 500mm. The moments and shears in the walls have been worked out using two way slab theory (table 2.78 of Reynolds reinf. conc. handbook, if anybody is familiar with it)
The wall and base slab are to be designed for full fixity.
Can I carry the moment at the base of the wall into the edge of the slab, like it is a portal frame?
How do I work out the moment in the centre of the tank, if any?
I tried looking at this like an inverted T cantilever retaining wall and work out the moments at the base due to bearing pressure. However as there is no over-turning moment (O/T moments from water cancel each other) there is an average uniform bearing pressure of Total load over area. This seems too simple?
Any help or references to other sources would be great.
I should add, I work for a small office and we don't have any FEM software, so this needs to be hand checked.