metalchair
Structural
- Oct 25, 2022
- 13
Hello All,
I am working on a retaining wall structure that is essentially a basement without a floor over the top. So it is a square with strip footings underneath the perimeter, but the top is not restrained by a floor. From how I understand it, active and passive pressures develop when the wall is allowed to rotate slightly, and an at-rest pressure is used when rotation is prevented.
I may be overthinking this problem, but here we are. Essentially, in my mind, on any given wall, the top of the wall is being restrained by the two adjacent walls. I think it is fair to say that if the wall length on any given side was 2ft long, there is no way the top of the wall in question would be able to rotate, as it is so short and in such close proximity to the adjacent walls. Similarly, even with an extremely long wall, lets say 250ft, the very ends would likely not be able to rotate at where they intersect with the adjacent walls. For this latter case, I would think that active/passive pressures would be able to develop in the middle, and an at-rest condition would be created towards the ends.
Follow-up Questions:
1) Do you believe my assumption of an at-rest condition near the adjacent walls is fair, or would you treat it as an active pressure along the whole wall when a floor is absent to truly restrain the top?
2) If an at-rest condition is present, do you design your wall for this condition, or simply go with the active pressure condition?
3) When checking sliding of the wall of a structure like this, in an at-rest condition, is there no pressure on the air-side helping resist sliding?
Thank you all in advance.
I am working on a retaining wall structure that is essentially a basement without a floor over the top. So it is a square with strip footings underneath the perimeter, but the top is not restrained by a floor. From how I understand it, active and passive pressures develop when the wall is allowed to rotate slightly, and an at-rest pressure is used when rotation is prevented.
I may be overthinking this problem, but here we are. Essentially, in my mind, on any given wall, the top of the wall is being restrained by the two adjacent walls. I think it is fair to say that if the wall length on any given side was 2ft long, there is no way the top of the wall in question would be able to rotate, as it is so short and in such close proximity to the adjacent walls. Similarly, even with an extremely long wall, lets say 250ft, the very ends would likely not be able to rotate at where they intersect with the adjacent walls. For this latter case, I would think that active/passive pressures would be able to develop in the middle, and an at-rest condition would be created towards the ends.
Follow-up Questions:
1) Do you believe my assumption of an at-rest condition near the adjacent walls is fair, or would you treat it as an active pressure along the whole wall when a floor is absent to truly restrain the top?
2) If an at-rest condition is present, do you design your wall for this condition, or simply go with the active pressure condition?
3) When checking sliding of the wall of a structure like this, in an at-rest condition, is there no pressure on the air-side helping resist sliding?
Thank you all in advance.