aaronPTeng
Structural
- Oct 14, 2013
- 62
All,
I have designed several PT structures over the years, lately I have started to see a great deal of cracking occurring (not on my structures) between the columns in the top of the slabs 90 degrees to the beams. My take on this is the slabs are spanning 2 way rather than the 1 way the designer has wanted. One particular case had a 7.5m beam direction grid and 8.2m slab span, with beams 2400(w) x 220(d) and slabs 150mm thick. Typically these structures I see with these issues have a 250(d) beam.
In my designs I typically narrow the beam and go a deeper section to try and get the band depth being 2 x slab thickness. In a run of 2D software this gives good results, in FEA it will still try and span the 2 directions, setting the slabs to 1 way just produces unrealistic results.
Is the band depth 2 x slab thickness adequate? with stiff sections in FEA you can produce results which limit the secondary moments in the slab direction and ensure a concrete section with P/A can handle this,
My frustration is when I have a design and place a slightly thicker beam and the builder or client will complain, even with a review of cracking of previous structures, the response is always, all concrete cracks? Does it matter?
I want to know other peoples thoughts on this situation?
I have designed several PT structures over the years, lately I have started to see a great deal of cracking occurring (not on my structures) between the columns in the top of the slabs 90 degrees to the beams. My take on this is the slabs are spanning 2 way rather than the 1 way the designer has wanted. One particular case had a 7.5m beam direction grid and 8.2m slab span, with beams 2400(w) x 220(d) and slabs 150mm thick. Typically these structures I see with these issues have a 250(d) beam.
In my designs I typically narrow the beam and go a deeper section to try and get the band depth being 2 x slab thickness. In a run of 2D software this gives good results, in FEA it will still try and span the 2 directions, setting the slabs to 1 way just produces unrealistic results.
Is the band depth 2 x slab thickness adequate? with stiff sections in FEA you can produce results which limit the secondary moments in the slab direction and ensure a concrete section with P/A can handle this,
My frustration is when I have a design and place a slightly thicker beam and the builder or client will complain, even with a review of cracking of previous structures, the response is always, all concrete cracks? Does it matter?
I want to know other peoples thoughts on this situation?