hokie66,
To reply your inquiry, below is from ASCE " Wind Loads & Anchor Bolt Design for Petrochemical Facilities " section 4.3.4 Stretching Length on page 4-5
On a typical anchor bolt embedment, as a pre-load is placed upon the bolt, the bolt starts to shed its load to the concrete through its grip (bond) on the bolt. At that time, there exists a high bond stress at the first few inches of embedment. This bond will relieve itself over time and thereby reduce the pre-load on the bolt. Therefore, it is important that the bond be prevented on anchor bolts to be pre-tensioned. Bond on the bolt shaft can be prevented by wrapping the shaft with plastic tape or by heavily coating the bolt with grease immediately before placing concrete. Grout must not be allowed to bond to the anchor bolt. Tape the portion of the anchor bolt through the grout zone and to within one inch of the bolt head, below the sleeve ...
The bond between anchor rod and concrete is the unfavorable thing in anchor bolt design. Many engineers are surprised when they see the anchor rod is wrapped with black electric tape throughout the anchor rod all the way down to 2" above the head. It doesn't harm the anchorage at all, on the contrast, it gets the anchor bolt head engaged to the concrete right after applying tensile load, otherwise the anchor rod takes the load at top few inches and the head takes no load.
You can take a look at the ACI 318-08 Appendix D pullout resistance formula, it's just the anchor bolt head bearing, no bond stress along the anchor rod shaft.
I hope above will answer your inquiry.
The "stretch length" is recently codified in ACI 318-11 for ductile anchor design. I got a reply from the author of anchor bolt design software from
and they say the "stretch length" will be updated in the ACI 318-11 version of anchor bolt design spreadsheet to reflect the anchor bolt ductility design for anchor bolt seismic application.