ugoveri
Structural
- Feb 6, 2003
- 13
Imagine that you have a shear wall with 0.25 x 9.00 meters, that somehow was needed with this geometry! How do I calculate the reiforcement! Is it still valid the theory that the section remain plain, and perpendicular to it's axis?
In a smaller shear wall, for example, 0.25x2.00 or 0.25x3.00, my code (Portugal) proposes that we consider two virtual columns with the following dimensions b x H2=min (2b; H/10) being b the widht and H the height, and that you concentrate the longitudinal reinforcement for the major bending in this virtual columns. The distance to the centre of the rebars in tension would be d=H - H2/2 so the reduced moment would come m = Msd/(b.d^2.fcd) being fcd the concrete design compression resistance.
But in a bigger shear wall is still the same? Is it ok to calculate the longitudinal reinforcement of the shear wall, as if it was a single element?
In a smaller shear wall, for example, 0.25x2.00 or 0.25x3.00, my code (Portugal) proposes that we consider two virtual columns with the following dimensions b x H2=min (2b; H/10) being b the widht and H the height, and that you concentrate the longitudinal reinforcement for the major bending in this virtual columns. The distance to the centre of the rebars in tension would be d=H - H2/2 so the reduced moment would come m = Msd/(b.d^2.fcd) being fcd the concrete design compression resistance.
But in a bigger shear wall is still the same? Is it ok to calculate the longitudinal reinforcement of the shear wall, as if it was a single element?