nutbutter
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 1, 2005
- 100
I have a question that can probably be answered rather simply by a structural engineer. I'm a civil engineer, however, I have little experience with structures. I'm fortunate enough to have been put on a job where the schedule is lax and I can get a bit of structures experience (albeit with heavy oversight). Recently on a project, we were designing a foundation that had to have very little displacement for extreme seismic events. One of the design alternatives was a solid RCC foundation that was ~10 ft thick.
Herein lies my question. How can one pour a 10' concrete slab without using any rebar to resist the tensile forces that are developed in the bottom of the slab?? From my research, RCC doesn't provide significantly more flexural strength than standard concrete. Wouldn't the tensile forces created in the bottom of a 10' thick slab be great enough to cause cracks to develop, starting the path toward failure??
Furthermore, I remember seeing a dam being constructed on the History channel. It appeared that this was lift after lift of RCC without any steel reinforcement. How could the lower areas of this dam resist the tensile forces that evolve from all the dead load of the concrete resting on top of it?? Why wouldn't rebar be needed in a huge monolithic concrete block?? Aren't the tensile forces still present in the lower reaches of the structure?
As you can see, I'm basically confused as to why RCC doesn't need any reinforcing steel whatsoever. If anyone can shed some light on this to help me understand I would appreciate it....
Peace,
Nutbutter
Herein lies my question. How can one pour a 10' concrete slab without using any rebar to resist the tensile forces that are developed in the bottom of the slab?? From my research, RCC doesn't provide significantly more flexural strength than standard concrete. Wouldn't the tensile forces created in the bottom of a 10' thick slab be great enough to cause cracks to develop, starting the path toward failure??
Furthermore, I remember seeing a dam being constructed on the History channel. It appeared that this was lift after lift of RCC without any steel reinforcement. How could the lower areas of this dam resist the tensile forces that evolve from all the dead load of the concrete resting on top of it?? Why wouldn't rebar be needed in a huge monolithic concrete block?? Aren't the tensile forces still present in the lower reaches of the structure?
As you can see, I'm basically confused as to why RCC doesn't need any reinforcing steel whatsoever. If anyone can shed some light on this to help me understand I would appreciate it....
Peace,
Nutbutter