VaStruct
Structural
- Sep 24, 2009
- 7
We’ve been working on a remedial repair project of a flat plate three story building that has punching shear issues and have been working on designing some steel collars to extend the critical perimeter around the column.
We determined the required perimeter in order to provide an adequate shear capacity for the slab based on 4*(f’c)^(1/2)*bo*d so that we can determine the required steel plate sizes but where we have been running into the most difficulty is in the design of the anchorage of the steel collar to the column.
We found several articles that referenced designing the steel collar to column connection to take the full shear load resulting from the punching shear check. For some of the columns, this results in factored loads on the order of 240 kips. This makes connections of the steel to the concrete columns very challenging.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this approach?
We determined the required perimeter in order to provide an adequate shear capacity for the slab based on 4*(f’c)^(1/2)*bo*d so that we can determine the required steel plate sizes but where we have been running into the most difficulty is in the design of the anchorage of the steel collar to the column.
We found several articles that referenced designing the steel collar to column connection to take the full shear load resulting from the punching shear check. For some of the columns, this results in factored loads on the order of 240 kips. This makes connections of the steel to the concrete columns very challenging.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this approach?