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ENCE 461
Foundation Analysis and
Design

Spread Footings: Structural Design, Flexural Design


Mat Foundations (Part I)
Reinforcing Steel for Flexural
Loads
 Concrete's weakness in tension; thus, reinforcing
steel must be added when tension is anticipated,
which is virtually guaranteed with flexural
loading
 Reinforcing steel in foundation almost inevitably
involves use of reinforcing bars (rebar); welded
wire fabric, needles, etc., are not generally used
 Since flexural stresses are usually small, Grade 40 (Metric
Grade 300, fy = 40 ksi or 300 MPa) steel is usually adequate,
although unavailable for bars larger than #6, in which case
Grade 60 (Metric Grade 420, fy = 60 ksi or 420 MPa) steel
may have to be used
Principles for Flexural Design
 Factored moment on the critical surface Muc
determines the necessary dimensions of the
member and the necessary size and location of
the reinforcing bars
 This can be a complex process; however,
geotechnical considerations tend to simplify the
design process, as it dictates some of the options
 Amount of the steel required flexure depends
upon the effective depth d
Principles for Flexural Design

Effective depth
Compression

Tension
Principles for Flexural Design
 Nominal moment capacity of a flexural member
made of reinforced concrete with f'c < 30 MPa (4
ksi) a
M n A s f y d  
2
d f y
a
0.85 f' c
As

bd
Principles for Flexural Design
 Setting Mu =  Mn (where Mu = factored moment
at the section being analysed), As can be solved
to
f' c b 2.353 M uc
As  d  d  
2
1.176 f y  f' c b
Principles for Flexural Design
 Variables for equation:
 As = cross-sectional area of reinforcing steel
 f'c = 28-day compressive strength of concrete
 fy = yield strength of reinforcing steel
  = steel ratio
 b = width of flexural member
 d = effective depth
  = 0.9 for flexure in reinforced concrete
 Muc = factored moment at the section being analysed
f' c b 2.353 M uc
A s  d  d  
2
1.176 f y  f' c b
Minimum and Maximum Steel
 Minimum Steel Requirements (ACI 10.5.4 and
7.12.2
 For Grade 40 (Metric Grade 300) Steel: As > 0.002 Ag
 For Grade 60 (Metric Grade 420) Steel: As > 0.0018
Ag
 Ag = Gross Cross-sectional area
  = As/Ag
 Maximum Steel Requirements (ACI 10.3) never
govern the design of spread footings, but may be
of concern in combined footings and mats
Minimum and Maximum
Spacing
 Selection of reinforcing bar size and spacing
must satisfy the following minimum and
maximum spacing requirements
 Clear space between bars must be at least equal to db,
25 mm (1"), or 4/3 times the nominal aggregate size
 Centre-to-centre spacing of the reinforcement must not
exceed 3T or 500 mm (18"), whichever is less
Development Length
 Development length Id is the length rebars must
extend through the concrete in order to develop
proper anchorage
 Assumptions for calculations of minimum
development length
 Clear spacing between the bars is at least 2db
 Concrete cover is at least db
Development Length
 Development length Id  Development Length
(English Units) Id (SI Units)
Id 3 f y 
Id 9 f y 

 
d b 40 f' c c K tr d b 10 f' c c K tr
   
db db
Atr f yt Atr f yt
K tr  K tr 
1500 s n 10 s n

For spread footings use Ktr = 0, which is conservative


Development Length
 Variables for development length variables
 Id = minimum required development length (in., mm)
 db = nominal rebar diameter (in, mm)
 fy = yield strength of reinforcing steel (psi, MPa)
 fyt = yield strength of transverse reinforcing steel (psi,
MPa)
 f'c = 28-day compressive strenght of concrete (psi,
MPa)
Development Length
 Variables for development length variables
  = reinforcement location factor
 


  
  
 

  
 
 
 

  
 
  

  
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Development Length
 Variables for development length variables
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Development Length
 Variables for development length variables
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Application to Spread Footings

a) Footings in reality
bend in two
perpendicular
directions
b) Footings are designed
as if they bend in only
one direction
Justification of One-Way Slab
Assumption
 The full-scale load tests on which this analysis
method is based were interpreted this way
 Foundations should be designed more
conservatively than the superstructure
 Flexural stresses are low, so amount of steel
required is nominal and often governed by min
 Additional construction cost due to this
simplified approach is minimal
 Once footing is analysed one way, we place the
same steel area in the perpendicular direction
Steel Area
 Usual procedure is to prepare a moment diagram
and select an appropriate amount of steel for each
portion of the member
 For spread footings, we can simplify this by
identifying a critical section for bending and use
the moment determined there to design the steel
for the entire footing
 Location of critical section for bending depends
upon the type of column being used
Critical Section for Bending
Moment at Critical Bending
Section Based on
soil bearing
 Factored bending moment pressure with
assumed
Assumes Pu acts 2
through centroid Pu l 2 M u l eccentricity
of footing M uc  of B/3

2B B
 Muc = factored moment at critical section for bending
 Pu = factored compressive load from column
 Mu = factored moment load from column
 l = cantilever distance
 B = footing width
Design Cantilever Distances
 Concrete Columns  Notes
 l = (B-c)/2  Treat timber columns in
same way as concrete
 Masonry Columns columns
 l = (B – c/2)/2  If column has circular,
octagonal or other
 Steel Columns similar shape, use a
square with equivalent
 l = (2B – (c + cp))/4 cross-sectional area
 Variables  If column has a circular
or regular polygon cross-
 B = footing width sectional area, base the
 c = column width analysis on an equivalent
square
 cp = base plate width
Computation of Steel Area
 Compute Muc
 Find the steel area As and reinforcement ratio 
a
M n  A s f y d  
2
f' c b 2.353 M uc d f y
A s  d  d  
2
1.176 f y  f' c b a
0.85 f' c
As

bd
 : 7 .'    #   <
 = #  "' 
!
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Computation of Development
Length
 The development length is measured from the
critical section for bending to the end of the bars
(usually 70 mm (3") from the end of the footing,
even if loads don't require it)
 Supplied development length
 I d supplied l 70 mm 3 in
 (Id)supplied = supplied development length
 l = cantilever distance
 This length must be greater than the required
development length. If not, best solution is to use
smaller rebars with shorter development lengths
Example of Flexure Design
 Given
 Foundation design used in shear design example, T =
27"
 Find
 Required steel area for flexure
 Solution
 Find Required Steel Area
 Determine cantilever distance l
Bc 12621
l  52.5
2 2
Example of Flexure Design
 Given
 Foundation design used in shear design example, T =
27"
 Find
 Required steel area for flexure
 Solution
 Find Required Steel Area
 Determine cantilever distance l
Bc 12621
l  52.5 inches
2 2
Example of Flexure Design
 Find Required Steel Area
 Determine factored bending moment at critical section
2
Pu l 2 M u l
M uc 
2B B
2
991,000 52.5
M uc  0
2 126
M uc 10,800,000 in-lbs
Example of Flexure Design
 Find Required Steel Area
 Determine steel area based on factored bending
moment at critical section

f' c b 2.353 M uc
A s  d  d 
2

1.176 f y  f' c b
4000 126 2.353 10,800,000
As  23 
1.176 60,000 0.9 4000 126
A s 8.94 in 2
For flexure in
reinforced concrete
Example of Flexure Design
 Check computed steel area against minimum
steel requirements
 For Grade 60 steel, As > 0.018 Ag = 0.018 B T
 Minimum steel area = (0.018)(27)(126) = 6.12 in2
 Since As = 8.94 sq.in. > 6.12 sq.in., OK
 Use #8 (1") bars: Area of each bar = 0.79 sq. in.
 Number of bars = 8.94/0.79 = 11.3 so use 12 bars
 Space between bars = 126/12 = 8.7"
 Minimum spacing = 18" or 3T = (3)(27) = 81" so OK
either way
Example of Flexure Design
 Check development length
 (Id)supplied = l – 3 = 52.5 – 3 = 49.5"
 Check required inequalities
 3  45 6$7 > 46 ;
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Example of Flexure Design
 Check development length
Id 3 f y 


d b 40 f' c c K tr
 
db
I d 3 60000 1 1 1 1

d b 40 4000 2.5
For 1" bars, I = 28"
d
Id Since (I ) = 49.5,
28 d applied
development length is OK
db
Example of Flexure Design
 Final Design
Mat Foundations
Reasons to Consider Raft or
Mat Foundations
 Structural loads are so high and soil conditions
are so poor that spread footings would be
exceptionally large.
 If spread footings are more that 1/3 of building
footprint area, a mat or a deep foundation would
probably be more economical
 Soil is very erratic or prone to differential
settlements, or soils that are expansive or subject
to differential heaves
 Structural loads are erratic; flexural strength of
the mat will absorb these irregularities
Reasons to Consider Raft or
Mat Foundations
 Lateral loads are not uniformly distributed
through the structure and thus may cause
differential horizontal movements in spread
footings or pile caps.
 Uplift loads are larger than spread footings can
accommodate.
 Bottom of the structure is located below the
groundwater table, so waterproofing is an
important concern. Mats are monolithic, so
easier to waterproof. Weight of mat also resists
hydrostatic uplift forces.
Pile Supported Mats
Downdrag Problems
Transfer of Column Loads to
Mats
Methods of Designing Mat
Foundations
 Rigid Methods
 Considers the mat far more rigid than the surrounding
soils, so flexure of the mat does not affect distribution
of bearing pressure
 Nonrigid Metods
 Considers the flexibility of the mat relative to the soil
Rigid Methods
 Magnitude and distribution of bearing pressure
only depend on the applied loads and the weight
of the mat
 Distribution is either uniform or varies linearly across
the mat (same as spread footings)
Application of Rigid Methods
 Although rigid methods are appropriate for
spread footings, it is not really applicable for mat
foundations
 Portions of a mat beneath column and bearing
walls will settle more than portions with less
load, which increases bearing pressure beneath
heavily-loaded zones
 This is especially true with foundations on stiff
soils and rock, but is true with all foundations
 Simplified bearing pressure is in reality not
correct in any case; more important with large
mat
Distribution with Column Loads
Questions?

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