(A little bit late but i wanted to do some more research to gain some more knowledge before expressing my gratitude.)
Thank you so much for your response. I really appreciate your help.
Although, i dont have a copy of Asce41 but i did find a design guide for Asce41 on internet. Sadly, it didn't have the information i was looking for. Your second link, however, was very informational for retrofitting of foundation. (Even though the increased load is not due to seismic activity, but due to the addition of a small bin on the structure.)
I'm doing this kind of retrofitting (i.e., concrete jacketing) for the first time, so I wanted to make sure I was doing it right and as per code provisions.
I'm mostly concerned whether the anchorage of the shear connector in the existing concrete will be sufficient to provide a monolithic type of connection between the new and old surface.
The research reports I've read give very sparse information regarding the anchorage. Most just instructed in a paragraph to make sure the anchorage is properly designed to transfer the shear between old and new concrete and some mentioned to provide a min embedded length of 6db for connectors.
For a 12Dia bolt this give a min length of 72 mm. Which seems to be a very small length, even though the shear transfer by a rebar will not be very large and at maximum will be equals to the shear strength of the rebar.
But I do think that a rebar of this small length can easily slip. And, this will become a definite possiblity if the drilled holes are not properly cleaned before application of epoxy bonds.
On the other hand, if i provide a length equals to development length (approx equals to 28db), this seems like an unreasonably large depth.
From similar past projects designed by my firm, provided detail of concrete jackets have 60 ksi anchor rebars embedded in an epoxy filled hole, which has a diameter = db + 2mm and length of 200 mm. And so far no problem has arisen or brought to our notice from those projects.
For edge distances and spacing between connectors I'm following provisions of Aci 318 for shear force anchorage.
Euphoria is when you learn something new.