Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations KootK on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Understanding ACI Design Example 1

ACivilLife

Structural
Nov 18, 2024
4
Hello everyone,

I have some questions about a wall footing design example from the ACI design handbook (see image).

1. In general, how would you get the axial force effects from a wind load on the wall footing. My thinking is let's say you had 12-inch CMU exterior walls that are 20 ft tall on two sides of a building with a 60 ft x 60 ft footprint. To keep things simple, let's say you had a uniform 20 psf wind load blowing on one of the 60 ft faces (in the plane of the walls). Could you calculate the axial force effects on the wall as follows:

Total Load on a single wall per ft of wall height = 20 psf (30 ft) = 600 lbs/ft
Total Moment at base of wall = wL^2/2 (assuming fixed-free) = (600 lbs/ft)*(20 ft)^2/2 =120,000 lbs-ft
Moment of Inertia of Wall = 1/12*bh^3 = 1/12 * (1ft)*(60ft)^3 = 18,000 ft^4
Maximum Bending Stress at Base of Wall = Mc/I = (120,000 lbs-ft)*(30ft)/(18,000 ft^4) = 200 lbs/ft^2
Maximum Axial Effect on Wall per ft length of wall = (200 lbs/ft^2)/(1 ft) = 200 lbs/ft (Wall thickness = 1 ft nominally)

Is my line of thinking correct for getting the axial load effect?

2. Several allowable soil-bearing pressures are provided in the ACI Design Example. Where do these come from? I know you can get basic load bearing values from IBC Table 1806.2 or the geotech report, but would the different allowable soil pressures for the lateral combinations be some combination of lateral bearing and sliding resistance from Table 1806.2? Also, why would there be a different allowable soil-bearing pressure for D vs. D+L?

EngTipsQuestion.png
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Responding to your #2 -- some soil conditions have different (vertical) bearing capacities depending on the duration of loading (depending on water table, settlement effects, etc). This is specific to a site and accounting for this variability is falling out of common practice (at least from what I've seen). Most commonly, you are provided a single bearing capacity from a geotech (or presume a single bearing capacity from 1806.2) and design the footing to not exceed that limit for any load combination.

Sometimes you can go back to a geotechnical engineer to get a more refined bearing capacity depending on the load duration, but I've never seen that provided in the initial report.
 
Responding to your #2 -- some soil conditions have different (vertical) bearing capacities depending on the duration of loading (depending on water table, settlement effects, etc). This is specific to a site and accounting for this variability is falling out of common practice (at least from what I've seen). Most commonly, you are provided a single bearing capacity from a geotech (or presume a single bearing capacity from 1806.2) and design the footing to not exceed that limit for any load combination.

Sometimes you can go back to a geotechnical engineer to get a more refined bearing capacity depending on the load duration, but I've never seen that provided in the initial report.
Thanks for the response. That makes a lot of sense and is more in line with what I've experienced.
 
For the axial load effect on the wind front it could be generated by wind on roof or done in the way you noted I approach it this way as it's common for some software applications to only report P,V,M at the base of a wall which you can decompose into a line load on the wall via:

For a straight run of wall that becomes:
P/A +/- M/S, where A=t*L and S = t*L^2/6

P/(t*L) +/ - 6 M / t*L^2

take t = unity as the above would result in pressure which you would then multiply by t to become a line load centered in the wall.

Variable Line Load at the wall centerline = P/L +/- 6*M / L^2
 

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor