Reinforced concrete beam safety check: A beam of width 25 cm with an effective lever arm (jd) of 40 cm resists a shear force of 6 t; the permissible (safe) shear stress is 5 kg/cm² and the applied bending moment is 24 t·m. Assess the beam's adequacy in shear under these conditions.

Difficulty: Medium

Correct Answer: is unsafe in shear

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:

This problem tests the fundamental shear capacity check for a reinforced concrete (R.C.C.) beam using working-stress style calculations. Even if a beam satisfies bending, it must also be verified that the nominal shear stress does not exceed the permissible (safe) shear stress for the concrete section.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Beam breadth (b) = 25 cm.
  • Effective lever arm (jd) ≈ 40 cm (used as the effective depth for shear check in this classic formulation).
  • Shear force V = 6 t = 6000 kg.
  • Permissible shear stress τ_perm = 5 kg/cm².
  • Applied bending moment M = 24 t·m (given for completeness, but the governing check here is shear).


Concept / Approach:

For preliminary shear safety under working stress methods, the nominal shear stress is estimated as τ_v = V / (b * jd). If τ_v > τ_perm, the section is unsafe in shear, regardless of its adequacy in bending. Appropriate remedies include providing shear reinforcement (stirrups), increasing section size, or reducing shear by layout changes.


Step-by-Step Solution:

Compute τ_v = V / (b * jd).Convert V: 6 t = 6000 kg (force units consistent with kg/cm²).Area resisting shear proxy = b * j*d = 25 cm * 40 cm = 1000 cm².Thus τ_v = 6000 / 1000 = 6 kg/cm².Compare with permissible: 6 kg/cm² > 5 kg/cm² → exceeds allowable shear stress.


Verification / Alternative check:

Even if bending is satisfactory (M given as 24 t·m), shear governs because τ_v surpasses τ_perm. Introducing adequate shear reinforcement might help, but as stated, the current check indicates a shear shortfall.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • is safe / is over safe: Contradicted by τ_v > τ_perm.
  • needs redesigning: Vague; the precise verdict is that it is unsafe in shear (redesign or extra shear steel is needed).
  • safe in bending but unsafe in shear: Although true descriptively, the asked judgment focuses on shear adequacy; standard answer is ‘‘is unsafe in shear’’.


Common Pitfalls:

  • Mixing units (tonne vs kg) or using total depth instead of effective lever arm for shear check in this classic exam style.
  • Assuming bending adequacy implies shear adequacy; both checks are independent.


Final Answer:

is unsafe in shear

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