driftLimiter
Structural
- Aug 28, 2014
- 1,406
I know this question has been beat to death But I have a particular arrangement That I am curious of others opinions.
The connection is a Gusset Plate connection to a Buckling Restrained Brace at the column baseplate.
AISC 341 - 16 Is clear that connection design forces should be based on the adjusted which I am just going to call Overstrength Load for the purpose of this discussion.
The connection approach we would like to take is to transfer tension into a grade beam via reinf. that is developed into the grade beam and welded to the gusset plate.
The grade beam spreads out the lateral forces to the elements we have designed to resist it. The foundation resistance is based not on the Overstrength loads, but instead the ductile seismic force Qe.
SOO, the approach I'd like to take is to proportion the reinforcement based on the force Qe. But since it is connected to the steel connection (and its providing the lateral resistance at the base of the frame).
It feels like I have a short circuit because the connection design (at least on the steel side) is going to be designed to resist the overstrength loads, but the elements supporting that connection are not.
I guess this is the same quandry that we run into anytime we are designing a connection requiring over strength, but a foundation that does not. I could simply add more bars to be able to show we have enough bars for overstrength, but then I wonder why I would do this if the foundation system doesn't have the overstrength capacity anyway.
The connection is a Gusset Plate connection to a Buckling Restrained Brace at the column baseplate.
AISC 341 - 16 Is clear that connection design forces should be based on the adjusted which I am just going to call Overstrength Load for the purpose of this discussion.
The connection approach we would like to take is to transfer tension into a grade beam via reinf. that is developed into the grade beam and welded to the gusset plate.
The grade beam spreads out the lateral forces to the elements we have designed to resist it. The foundation resistance is based not on the Overstrength loads, but instead the ductile seismic force Qe.
SOO, the approach I'd like to take is to proportion the reinforcement based on the force Qe. But since it is connected to the steel connection (and its providing the lateral resistance at the base of the frame).
It feels like I have a short circuit because the connection design (at least on the steel side) is going to be designed to resist the overstrength loads, but the elements supporting that connection are not.
I guess this is the same quandry that we run into anytime we are designing a connection requiring over strength, but a foundation that does not. I could simply add more bars to be able to show we have enough bars for overstrength, but then I wonder why I would do this if the foundation system doesn't have the overstrength capacity anyway.