1 / 15

Connection Design

Connection Design. Types of Connections. Three forces: Axial, shear and moment Many connections have 2 or more simultaneously. Connections are usually classified according to the major load type carried. Shear Moment Axial: splices, bracing, truss connectors, hangers….

lotte
Download Presentation

Connection Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Connection Design

  2. Types of Connections • Three forces: Axial, shear and moment • Many connections have 2 or more simultaneously. • Connections are usually classified according to the major load type carried. • Shear • Moment • Axial: splices, bracing, truss connectors, hangers…

  3. Economic Considerations • Shear Connections: • Design for specified factored loads • Allow use of single-plate and single-angle shear connections • Do NOT specify full-depth connections or rely on AISC uniform load tables

  4. Economic Considerations • Moment connections: • Design for specified factored moments and shears. • Provide a breakdown of the total moment • Gravity, seismic, wind are treated separately • This is needed for column web doubler plate calcs • If stiffeners are required, allow use of fillet welds instead of complete joint penetration welds • To avoid use of stiffeners, consider redesign with a heavier column to avoid them.

  5. Economic Considerations • Bracing Connections • In addition to providing brace force, also provide beam shear and axial transfer force. • The transfer force is not necessarily the beam axial force obtained from FEA • Misunderstanding of the transfer force can lead ot uneconomic or unsafe connections

  6. Strength Limit States: Tension • Either tension yielding or fracture govern. Design strength for yielding in the gross section is • F Rn = f sy Ag • Design strength for fracture in net section is • f Rn = fsu An • f = 0.9 for yield, 0.75 for fracture • sy = yield strength; su = tensile strength; Ag = gross area; An = net area.

  7. Tension • Sometimes entire gross area or net area cannot be considered effective. • For example, brace attaching to a large gusset: Gross area is based on the Whitmore section • Or, connecting elements, such as angles, where only one leg of the angle is connected, a shear lag factor must be included in the calculation of net area.

  8. Shear • Either shear yielding or fracture govern. Design strength for yielding in the gross section is • F Rn = f 0.6 sy Ag • Design strength for fracture in net section is • f Rn = f 0.6 su An • Due to resistance provided by the flange, net shear fracture will govern capacity of flanged members only when BOTH flanges are coped.

  9. Bending • Either tension yielding or fracture govern. Design strength for yielding in the gross section is • F Rn = f sy Zg • Design strength for fracture in net section is • f Rn = fsu Zn

  10. Bending: Plastic section • Zn = Zg (1 - dh/b) • Where dh = hole diameter and b = bolt spacing • This is exact for even number of rows, and slightly conservative for odd number.

  11. Localized Limit States Local web compression buckling Local flange bending Axial yield line Plate Plastification • Bearing at bolt holes • Bolt tear-out • Block shear • Local web yielding • Local web crippling

  12. Bearing at Bolt holes • Large compressive stresses can occur where the shank of the bolt bears on the connected material. • f Rn = f 2.4 db t su • Where f = 0.75, db = bolt diameter, t = thickness of material. • If deformation at the bolt hole under service loads is not a design consideration, the bearing strength can be determined as • f Rn = f 3.0 db t su

  13. Bolt Tear-out • Shear fracture where bolt tears out through the material. • If deformation at bolt hole is a concern, use previous equation or this (whichever is smaller) • f Rn = f 1.2 Lc t su < f 2.4 db t su if we don’t care about hole def, • Rn = f 1.5 Lc t su< f 3.0 db t su where Lc = length of connector tearing out

  14. Possible failures • For each bolt, have to check • Bolt shear • Bearing on main material at bolt • Bearing on connection material at bolt • Bolt tear out through main material • Bolt tear out through connection material

  15. 7/8” A490X bolts 1.5” 3” 1.5” 3 1 3/8 PL (A36) W8x15 4 2

More Related