structuresguy
Structural
- Apr 10, 2003
- 505
Hi all. We are doing a design of a large PT slab building where several walls butt up against adjacent walls. The slab spans are long enough to require stressing from both ends, but because of the walls, we don't have access on one side to stress the tendons. So our first thought was to stress the slab at construction joints with the tendons continuous. But it sounds like the contractor wants to pour more slab at each pour than our joint spacing would allow. So now we are thinking to use intermediate stressing pockets on the band lines, so that the entire slab can be poured in one shot, but still allow us to stress it in reasonable lengths.
The problem is, none of us have experience with using intermediate stress pockets. So we are looking for any tips, tricks, or best practices that you all might recommend. It would seem that additional mild rebar is needed parallel to the banded tendons between the pockets, to resist cracking due to differential prestressing levels in the slab. Also, we would plan to locate the pockets such that the tendons are at the neutral axis at the stressing blocks. But otherwise, are there other things we should consider?
Thanks very much.
Andrew
The problem is, none of us have experience with using intermediate stress pockets. So we are looking for any tips, tricks, or best practices that you all might recommend. It would seem that additional mild rebar is needed parallel to the banded tendons between the pockets, to resist cracking due to differential prestressing levels in the slab. Also, we would plan to locate the pockets such that the tendons are at the neutral axis at the stressing blocks. But otherwise, are there other things we should consider?
Thanks very much.
Andrew