Kstructuralguy
Structural
- Mar 6, 2018
- 6
I'm designing moment connections for 2 bay moment frame, with an HSS8x8x5/8 column in the middle that connects to W21x68 beams, each with matching 239.2 K-Ft end moments at the column. I have been following AISC Design Guide 24, example 4.2 to do this. This was pretty straight forward until I got to the required fillet weld thickness. Following their procedure, I ended up with a required fillet weld thickness of over 2". Intuitively this seems wrong to me. I have done my frame analysis in Risa 3d. When I look at the member forces, the beam end moments match and there is almost no moment in the column itself. Is this correct?
For those without the design guide, their equation for the "Required resistance per unit length of weld" = [Pa /(Aw/t throat]) + [Ma*(H/2)/(I/t throat)]. Where Pa = axial load, Ma = moment, H = Column width parallel to the moment force. I = the moment of inertia and Aw = Area of the weld, which is the perimeter of the column times the weld throat. They say use part 8 AISC for weld size required and set Rn/omega = 0.928*D*l (for ASD), where D = n/16" of an inch for fillet weld. Set the weld strength equal to the required strength and the l is divided out (since the required resistance is per unit length) and you solve for D.
I'm not understanding the "Required resistance per unit length of weld" equation. If the Pa (axial load) is all gravity (compression), why is any weld required beyond attachment for stability? More importantly, why is the Ma multiplied by half of the column width and then divided by the welds moment of inertia? When designing the plates & bolts, the moment force was divided by the beam depth to give the tension and compression in each chord. If I design the welds for the chord force at the base they do not need to be nearly this large. Is this an accurate way to analyze this? If not, I believe I would need a CJP weld to keep in manageable. what is the effective throat of a complete joint penetration weld for this case?
For those without the design guide, their equation for the "Required resistance per unit length of weld" = [Pa /(Aw/t throat]) + [Ma*(H/2)/(I/t throat)]. Where Pa = axial load, Ma = moment, H = Column width parallel to the moment force. I = the moment of inertia and Aw = Area of the weld, which is the perimeter of the column times the weld throat. They say use part 8 AISC for weld size required and set Rn/omega = 0.928*D*l (for ASD), where D = n/16" of an inch for fillet weld. Set the weld strength equal to the required strength and the l is divided out (since the required resistance is per unit length) and you solve for D.
I'm not understanding the "Required resistance per unit length of weld" equation. If the Pa (axial load) is all gravity (compression), why is any weld required beyond attachment for stability? More importantly, why is the Ma multiplied by half of the column width and then divided by the welds moment of inertia? When designing the plates & bolts, the moment force was divided by the beam depth to give the tension and compression in each chord. If I design the welds for the chord force at the base they do not need to be nearly this large. Is this an accurate way to analyze this? If not, I believe I would need a CJP weld to keep in manageable. what is the effective throat of a complete joint penetration weld for this case?