Lion06
Structural
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4,238
I have a somewhat theoretical question regarding concrete walls as they are a reasonably popular topic of discussion on this forum.
I, as many others, often design concrete foundation walls as pinned-pinned when there is a first floor diaphragm to tie into. I understand people have been doing this forever and I am not questioning the practice. My question is this: Is a pinned base really able to be achieved in any typical detailing that anyone does?
I am thinking that any rebar tying the wall to the footing is providing some moment capacity. I understand the pinned-pinned case is the worst case for the wall, so that is being conservative is you get some end moment capacity out of the foundation to footing connection. Assuming a pinned base is unconservative for the footing since there WILL be some moment at the base. Even if the steel yields and a "plastic hinge" forms at the base it doesn't lose its moment capacity.
Also, there must be some steel at the interface of the footing/wall since they are usually seperate pours and the steel is need for shear.
Any opinions on this would be greatly appreciated.
I, as many others, often design concrete foundation walls as pinned-pinned when there is a first floor diaphragm to tie into. I understand people have been doing this forever and I am not questioning the practice. My question is this: Is a pinned base really able to be achieved in any typical detailing that anyone does?
I am thinking that any rebar tying the wall to the footing is providing some moment capacity. I understand the pinned-pinned case is the worst case for the wall, so that is being conservative is you get some end moment capacity out of the foundation to footing connection. Assuming a pinned base is unconservative for the footing since there WILL be some moment at the base. Even if the steel yields and a "plastic hinge" forms at the base it doesn't lose its moment capacity.
Also, there must be some steel at the interface of the footing/wall since they are usually seperate pours and the steel is need for shear.
Any opinions on this would be greatly appreciated.