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N.W.F.P. University of Engineering and Technology Peshawar: Lecture 06: Tension Members

This document contains a lecture on tension members given by Prof. Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan. The lecture covers various topics related to the design of tension members including: types of steel structures that tension members are part of, introductory concepts such as stress calculations, design strength based on yielding and fracture, net area at connections accounting for things like bolt holes, and the shear lag phenomenon. Examples are provided for calculating net area and design strength. The lecture also discusses ASD and LRFD design methods for tension members.

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Nasir Ullah
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views97 pages

N.W.F.P. University of Engineering and Technology Peshawar: Lecture 06: Tension Members

This document contains a lecture on tension members given by Prof. Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan. The lecture covers various topics related to the design of tension members including: types of steel structures that tension members are part of, introductory concepts such as stress calculations, design strength based on yielding and fracture, net area at connections accounting for things like bolt holes, and the shear lag phenomenon. Examples are provided for calculating net area and design strength. The lecture also discusses ASD and LRFD design methods for tension members.

Uploaded by

Nasir Ullah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 97

N.W.F.P.

University of Engineering and


Technology Peshawar

Lecture 06: Tension Members

By: Prof Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan


[email protected]

1
Topics to be Addressed
Types of Steel Structures
Introductory concepts
Design Strength
Net Area at Connection
Shear Lag Phenomenon
ASD and LRFD Design of Tension
Members
Design Examples
CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 2
Types of steel structures

The form of a tension member is


governed to a large extent by
 Type of structure of which it is a part
 Method of joining it to connecting portions.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 3


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 4


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 5


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 6


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 7


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 8


Types of steel structures

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 9


10
Sections for Tension Members

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 11


12
Sections for Tension Members

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 13


Design Stresses
for
Base Material

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 14


15
16
Introductory Concepts
Stress: The stress in an axially loaded tension
member is given by Equation
 The stress in a tension member is uniform
throughout the cross-section except:
 near the point of application of load, and
 at the cross-section with holes for bolts or other
discontinuities, etc.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 17


18
19
20
21
Types of steel structures

Gusset plate

b Section b-b
b
7/8 in. diameter hole

a a
Section a-a
8 x ½ in. bar

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 22


23
Design strength
•  A tension member can fail by reaching one
of two limit states:

1. Excessive deformation
• Yielding at the gross area

2. Fracture
• Fracture at the net area

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 24


25
26
27
28
Topics to be Covered
Nominal Strength
 Yielding of X-Section
 Fracture at Connection
Net Area at Connection
Shear Lag Phenomenon
ASD and LRFD Design of Tension Members
Design Examples

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan


Design strength
1. Excessive deformation can occur due to the
yielding of the gross section at section a-a

Gusset plate

b Sectio
b
7/8 in. diameter hole

a a
Sectio
8 x ½ in. bar

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 32


Design strength
2. Fracture of the net section can occur if the stress
at the net section (section b-b) reaches the
ultimate stress Fu

Gusset plate

b Sec
b
7/8 in. diameter hole

a a
Se
8 x ½ in. bar

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 33


Design strength
Yielding of the gross section will occur when
the stress f reaches Fy
P
f   Fy
Ag

Nominal yield strength = Pn = Ag Fy

• Fracture of the net section will occur after the stress


on the net section area reaches the ultimate stress Fu
P
f  Fu
Ae
Nominal fracture strength = Pn = Ae Fu
CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 34
Design strength
• AISC/ASD
Ft = 0.6 Fy on Gross Area
Ft = 0.5 Fu on Effective Area

• AISC/LRFD
Design strength for yielding on gross area
øtPn =øt Fy Ag = 0.9 Fy Ag
Design strength for fracture of net section
øtPn = øtFu Ae = 0.75 Fu Ae

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 35


36
37
38
39
40
Types of steel structures
Gusset plate

b Section b-b
b
7/8 in. diameter hole

a a
Section a-a
8 x ½ in. bar

Area of bar at section a – a = 8 x ½ = 4 in2


Area of bar at section b – b = (8 – 2 x 7/8 ) x ½ = 3.12 in2

The unreduced area of the member is called its gross area = Ag


The reduced area of the member is called its net area = An
CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 41
42
Effective Net Area
• The connection has a significant influence on the
performance of a tension member.
• A connection almost always weakens the member
and a measure of its influence is called joint
efficiency.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 43


Effective Net Area

•Joint efficiency is a function of:


(a) Material ductility
(b) Fastener spacing
(c) Stress concentration at holes
(d) Fabrication procedure
(e) Shear lag.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 44


45
46
Effective Net Area
Research indicates that shear lag can be accounted for by
using a reduced or effective net area Ae
CG
For Bolted Connections
x1
x
U 1 
L
x2
• For bolted connection, the effective net area is Ae = U An

• For welded connection, the effective net area is Ae = U Ag

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 47


Effective Net Area
• For W, M, and S shapes with width-to-depth ratio of at least
2/3 and for Tee shapes cut from them, if the connection is
through the flanges with at least three fasteners per line in
the direction of applied load ,
U= 0.9

• For all other shapes with at least three fasteners per line ,
U= 0.85

• For all members with only two fasteners per line


U= 0.75

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 48


Net Area Example
Example : A 5 x ½ bar of A572 Gr. 50 steel is used as a tension
member. It is connected to a gusset plate with six 7/8 in. diameter
bolts as shown in below. Assume that the effective net area Ae equals
the actual net area An and compute the tensile design strength of the
member.

Gusset plate

b b
7/8 in. diameter bolt

a a

5 x ½ in. bar
A572 Gr. 50

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 49


50
51
Net Area Example

Gross section area (Ag):

Ag = 5 x ½ = 2.5 in2

Net section area (An):

Bolt diameter = db = 7/8 in.

Nominal hole diameter = dh = 7/8 + 1/16 in. = 15/16 in.

Hole diameter for calculating net area = 15/16 + 1/16 in. =


1 in.
Net section area = An = (5 – 2 x (1)) x ½ = 1.5 in2
CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 52
Net Area Example

Gross yielding design strength:


ft Pn = ft Fy Ag
= 0.9 x 50 ksi x 2.5 in2 = 112.5 kips
Fracture design strength:
ft Pn = ft Fu Ae
= 0.75 x 65 ksi x 1.5 in2 = 73.125 kips
Assume Ae = An (only for this problem)

Therefore, design strength = 73.125 kips (net section fracture


controls).

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 53


Shear Lag in Tension
Members
• Shear lag in tension members arises when all the
elements of a cross section do not participate in the
load transfer at a connection.
•There are two primary phenomena that arise in
these cases:
(i) Non-uniform straining of the web resulting in
biaxial stress states
(ii) Effective area reduction.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 54


55
Shear Lag in Tension
Members

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 56


Shear Lag in Tension
Members
Effective area reduction

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 57


Shear Lag in Tension
Members
Design Bottom Line
Shear lag can have a large influence on the
strength of tension members , in essence
reducing the effective area of the section. The
amount of the reduction is related to the length of
the connection and the arrangement of cross-
section elements that do not participate directly in
the connection load transfer.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 58


Block Shear in Tension
Members
Block shear is a combined tensile/shear tearing
out of an entire section of a connection.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 59


Block Shear in Tension
Members
For such a failure to occur, there are
two possible mechanisms:
(1) Shear rupture + tensile yielding; and
(2) Shear yielding + tensile rupturing.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 60


Block Shear in Tension
Members
Design Bottom Line

As a likely limit state for connections,


block shear must be considered in
design. This can be accomplished by
considering the strength limit states of
the two failure mechanisms outlined
above.

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 61


Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-ASD

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64
Design Example 1-ASD

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66
Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-ASD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

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Design Example 1-LRFD

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 79


Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

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Design Example 2-ASD

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 87


Design Example 2-ASD

Design Alternative 2

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 88


Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

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Design Example 2-LRFD

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 96


Design Example 2-LRFD

CE-409: Lecture 06 Prof. Dr Akhtar Naeem Khan 97

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