r-struct
Structural
- May 12, 2018
- 18
For a steel column baseplate connected to the foundation by anchor bolts with, say, 1" to 2" of grout under it, acted on by both tension (or compression) and shear at the same time, can we use the following shear friction expression as the shear capacity of the base connection?
V,capacity = phi*mu*(Ab*Fy - T)
where
phi = friction resistance factor
mu = coefficient of friction
Ab = total cross sectional area of anchor bolts
Fy = yield strength of anchor bolts
T = tension force acting on the anchor bolts (positive if tension, negative if compression)
This is assuming that the anchor bolts could reach their yield strengths prior to other failure modes occuring (concrete breakout, anchor pullout, or sideface blowout). Do you think, assuming only the shear friction mechanism works, this allows us to not needing to check the bending of bolts due to shear, or having to have some other form of shear transfer mechanism such as shear lugs or separate anchors specifically for shear?
Any thoughts from the more experienced engineers will be appreciated.
V,capacity = phi*mu*(Ab*Fy - T)
where
phi = friction resistance factor
mu = coefficient of friction
Ab = total cross sectional area of anchor bolts
Fy = yield strength of anchor bolts
T = tension force acting on the anchor bolts (positive if tension, negative if compression)
This is assuming that the anchor bolts could reach their yield strengths prior to other failure modes occuring (concrete breakout, anchor pullout, or sideface blowout). Do you think, assuming only the shear friction mechanism works, this allows us to not needing to check the bending of bolts due to shear, or having to have some other form of shear transfer mechanism such as shear lugs or separate anchors specifically for shear?
Any thoughts from the more experienced engineers will be appreciated.