Your encyclopedia of terms used in the industrial flooring industry.

Dominant Joint

Summary

Dominant Joint - A joint that opens wider than adjacent (typically dormant) joints in a sawn jointed floor.

Technical Information

Dominant Joint

Dominant joints and Dormant joints are phrases used to describe joints where some joints have opened significantly more than others despite the spacing of the joints being similar.

Often dominant and dormant joints occur in fabric reinforced slabs where the construction joints open wide but the sawn joints do not open at all. This can occur when the steel reinforcement is heavier than recommended and therefore it cannot yield under the shrinkage stresses locking the sawn joints closed. To avoid this the designer should ensure that the reinforcement within the slab is within the limits identified in TR34.

It is hypothesised that this may also be caused by the subbaseand slip membrane reducing friction on the bottom of the slab to a level where very little restraint is created so the slab is able to shrink unimpeded.

Related Definitions

Sawn Joints , Formed Joint , Joint Activation , Dormant Joint , Deformed Bar

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The CoGri Group is a leading international specialist in concrete flooring, with offices throughout the world.

The CoGri Group is a leading international specialist in concrete flooring, with offices throughout the world.

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