Eng16080 said:
You pretty much hit the nail on the head here on everything you wrote, but I would say some of your assumptions may be overlooking some effects. I'll try and summarize here best I can with limited space, but it's a fairly involved topic at the end of the day.
Eng16080 said:
I assume your statement means something like: the maximum published I-joist span lengths (which are mostly deflection limited) are based on the assumption that the subfloor is correctly glued to the I-joists
This is correct within the U.S. Every i-joist manufacturer that I am aware of
that publish span tables includes a footnote indicating that the spans are based upon composite action with 24" rated subfloor (ie 23/32" panel) that are glued and nailed. Some manufacturers have you subtract some amount of distance from total span if the connection is nailed only.
This is different in Canada, because most of the spans are vibration controlled rather than strictly deflection controlled. However, I do not work in Canada, and I am not familiar with CSA 086 enough to say whether composite action provides any benefit to vibration checks.
Eng16080 said:
I always assumed the glue was just something extra that wasn't contributing to strength or stiffness.
The link I included above discusses the derivation and calculation for deflection checks including composite action, as I assume you saw. Adhesive is only considered in this type of check, which is a serviceability check, rather than a strength check.
Eng16080 said:
So then, the span lengths would be non-conservative in the event that the field crew doesn't glue the subfloor or doesn't glue it per the specs of the I-joist supplier.
This is where things get a bit tricky. Not sure how familiar you are with structural wood products including sawn lumber, but wood is inherently an inconsistent structural material, there is significant variability from one piece to another in any binned product, whether that be visually graded, mechanically graded, or an engineered wood product. Because MOE is a
serviceability related design value, it's design value is not controlled very tightly. Published MOE value for all wood products are based upon the median design value of a normally distributed population, without any adjustments. If you have a copy of AWC's National Design Specification, check out Appendix F.
Per Appendix F, you'll see that the coefficient of variation for MOE of visually graded sawn lumber is 0.25, this is a large COV value, and means there is significant variability on stiffness of members within the population. In addition, because MOE is based on the median value, each piece has a 50% chance of having a lower stiffness than what was designed. Appendix F gives methods of adjusting MOE for critical applications. This is similar to the adjustments used for Emin, which is a strength critical design value rather than serviceability based design value.
What does this mean? Well, if you're concerned that the span tables are non-conservative, be aware that 50% of the joists (whether that be sawn lumber, mechanically graded, or engineered wood) have lower stiffness than the published value used for design. This is true for the span tables in the IBC/IRC as well, but is found to be acceptable practice.