Guastavino
Structural
- Jan 29, 2014
- 381
In honor of a fantastic previous thread: Link
So, I have modeled this condition. See attached RISA-3D file. So, I believe it shows that the footing WILL transfer moment to the soil, and quite easily. So, I will go back to the original question lion asked, and say, can we live with that, or should we adjust the design methods?
Backdrop:
1. Pin-pin wall conditions for RESTRAINED retaining walls is conservative for the WALL rebar. No need to argue this.
2. Pin-pin wall conditions for RESTRAINED retaining walls is NOT conservative for the footings. The additional moment transfers to the footing and increases soil pressure.
3. Many in the previous thread assumed that soil spring stiffness, etc. was not that significant compared to stiffness of the footing/wall.
4. Respectfully, I challenge that assumption and present the attached model as evidence.
5. Intuitively, this also makes sense because to me, the stiffness of soil compared to a footing is still quite large.
6. I open the floor for debate as to what methods to use. It makes a HUGE difference in footing size, which means cost, and it may not have an advantage.
With that said, please no, "WELL, We've always done it that way and there haven't been problems" arguments. It's not that I don't care about that argument, it's just that I want to understand the behavior, not justify the design based on empirical experience (even though it has value).
Thanks to all and I hope for some great discussion.
ALSO, know that RISA-Foundation (Josh Plummer please feel free to comment!), does this method. IE, they transfer footing from the base into the soil and design the footing accordingly, leading to larger footings. Albeit, it doesn't model the soil springs, just assumes the moment transfers. The 3D model that is attached is a plate model has been created to simulate the soil springs.
So, I have modeled this condition. See attached RISA-3D file. So, I believe it shows that the footing WILL transfer moment to the soil, and quite easily. So, I will go back to the original question lion asked, and say, can we live with that, or should we adjust the design methods?
Backdrop:
1. Pin-pin wall conditions for RESTRAINED retaining walls is conservative for the WALL rebar. No need to argue this.
2. Pin-pin wall conditions for RESTRAINED retaining walls is NOT conservative for the footings. The additional moment transfers to the footing and increases soil pressure.
3. Many in the previous thread assumed that soil spring stiffness, etc. was not that significant compared to stiffness of the footing/wall.
4. Respectfully, I challenge that assumption and present the attached model as evidence.
5. Intuitively, this also makes sense because to me, the stiffness of soil compared to a footing is still quite large.
6. I open the floor for debate as to what methods to use. It makes a HUGE difference in footing size, which means cost, and it may not have an advantage.
With that said, please no, "WELL, We've always done it that way and there haven't been problems" arguments. It's not that I don't care about that argument, it's just that I want to understand the behavior, not justify the design based on empirical experience (even though it has value).
Thanks to all and I hope for some great discussion.
ALSO, know that RISA-Foundation (Josh Plummer please feel free to comment!), does this method. IE, they transfer footing from the base into the soil and design the footing accordingly, leading to larger footings. Albeit, it doesn't model the soil springs, just assumes the moment transfers. The 3D model that is attached is a plate model has been created to simulate the soil springs.