cancmm
Structural
- Dec 4, 2009
- 93
Question regarding the design process for shear stud connectors...
I'm designing an H-Pile to concrete cap connection using shear studs due to high tensile loads in the pile. My immediate thought process is to design the connection using a shear friction approach, with appropriate checks against concrete breakout, etc. In other words, I would design the shear studs in tension.
Initial calculations suggest a 3/4" stud (smallest available from Nelson) needs to be embedded at least 12" to be fully developed. This seems excessive because I've seen much shorter studs in composite bridge decks before.
I feel like I'm missing something so I wanted to see if anyone could point me in the right direction. Is shear friction not the correct approach for some reason?
Thanks!
I'm designing an H-Pile to concrete cap connection using shear studs due to high tensile loads in the pile. My immediate thought process is to design the connection using a shear friction approach, with appropriate checks against concrete breakout, etc. In other words, I would design the shear studs in tension.
Initial calculations suggest a 3/4" stud (smallest available from Nelson) needs to be embedded at least 12" to be fully developed. This seems excessive because I've seen much shorter studs in composite bridge decks before.
I feel like I'm missing something so I wanted to see if anyone could point me in the right direction. Is shear friction not the correct approach for some reason?
Thanks!