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Civil. Engineering. at JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY. Notes on AISI Design Methods for Sheathing Braced Design of Wall Studs in Compression. B.W. Schafer report to AISI-COFS Design Methods Committee April 2008. Overview.
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Civil Engineering at JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Notes onAISI Design Methods for Sheathing Braced Design of Wall Studs in Compression B.W. Schafer report to AISI-COFS Design Methods Committee April 2008
Overview • Part of the AISI-COFS funded project on the design of sheathed walls with dis-similar sheathing. • Presentation developed from a report of the same name • Project updates, including full report available at www.ce.jhu.edu/bschafer/sheathedwalls • Report covers • Design methods via 1962, 1980-2004, 2007 AISI • Examination of sheathing stiffness ‘k’ • Initial summary of known demands and limit states on a sheathed wall stud in compression
AISI Design Methods 1962 AISI Design Manual 1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. 2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) “simplified” discrete spring model Simaan and Peköz shear diaphragm model Winter’s method discrete spring model
Basic notation I1, r1, Pcr1: strong-axis buckling perpendicular to the plane of the wall I2, r2, Pcr2: weak-axis buckling parallel to the plane of the wall e: initial imperfection
1962 AISI Design Manual 1962 AISI Specification • “The safe load-carrying capacity of a stud may be computed on the basis that the wall material or sheathing (attached to the stud) furnishes adequate lateral support to the stud in the plane of the wall, provided the wall material and its attachments to the stud comply with the following requirements:”
1962 AISI Design Manual 1962 AISI Specification fastener spacing, a, must be less than • “The safe load-carrying capacity of a stud may be computed on the basis that the wall material or sheathing (attached to the stud) furnishes adequate lateral support to the stud in the plane of the wall, provided the wall material and its attachments to the stud comply with the following requirements:”
1962 AISI Design Manual 1962 AISI Specification fastener spacing, a, must be less than • “The safe load-carrying capacity of a stud may be computed on the basis that the wall material or sheathing (attached to the stud) furnishes adequate lateral support to the stud in the plane of the wall, provided the wall material and its attachments to the stud comply with the following requirements:”
1962 AISI Design Manual 1962 AISI Specification fastener spacing, a, must be less than • “The safe load-carrying capacity of a stud may be computed on the basis that the wall material or sheathing (attached to the stud) furnishes adequate lateral support to the stud in the plane of the wall, provided the wall material and its attachments to the stud comply with the following requirements:” fastener-sheathing stiff- ness, k, must be at least:
1962 AISI Design Manual 1962 AISI Specification fastener spacing, a, must be less than • “The safe load-carrying capacity of a stud may be computed on the basis that the wall material or sheathing (attached to the stud) furnishes adequate lateral support to the stud in the plane of the wall, provided the wall material and its attachments to the stud comply with the following requirements:” fastener-sheathing stiff- ness, k, must be at least: fasteners must have at least this much strength:
1962 AISI Design Manual Fastener spacing limit #1 • Design basis: amax1 requires that weak-axis buckling of the stud, including contributions from the wall stiffness k, that is developed from fasteners at spacing a, is greater than or equal to the squash load of the column. fastener spacing, a, must be less than
1962 AISI Design Manual Fastener spacing limit #1 • Design basis: amax1 requires that weak-axis buckling of the stud, including contributions from the wall stiffness k, that is developed from fasteners at spacing a, is greater than or equal to the squash load of the column. Winter (1960) solution for column on a stiff, continuous, foundation fastener spacing, a, must be less than convert continuous foundation stiffness, b, to discrete springs, k, and set Pcr2=Afy solve for a, you get
1962 AISI Design Manual Fastener spacing limit #2 • Design basis: amax2 requires that weak-axis buckling of the stud over a length of 2a (twice the fastener spacing) must be greater than the strong-axis buckling over the entire length. fastener spacing, a, must be less than
1962 AISI Design Manual Fastener spacing limit #2 • Design basis: amax2 requires that weak-axis buckling of the stud over a length of 2a (twice the fastener spacing) must be greater than the strong-axis buckling over the entire length. Equating Pcr1 and Pcr2 implies fastener spacing, a, must be less than Insure weak-axis buckling over 2a does not control solve for a, you get
1962 AISI Design Manual minimum stiffness k • Design basis: kmin is the same as the amax1 design check. (from Winter 1960) fastener-sheathing stiff- ness, k, must be at least: sub in for E and p, solve for k
1962 AISI Design Manual fastener strength • Design basis: forces developed in an imperfect, but stiff continuous foundation under the design load P, should be carried by the fasteners, plus Winter adds some interesting empirical corrections. Winter (1960) defines forces developed in a stiff con- tinuous foundation supporting an imperfect column fasteners must have at least this much strength:
1962 AISI Design Manual fastener strength (continued) again, Winter uses the solution for buckling of a column on a stiff continuous foundation, this time to find the ideal stiffness bid (kid): fasteners must have at least this much strength: and which results in after substitution and rearranging, we find this ends, rational derivation and Winter introduces empiricism
fastener strength (continued) • assume kact=kid only under first denominator term • remove 2 under the radical in first term as well • remaining kact = k results in fasteners must have at least this much strength: Brace forces resulting from Example 11 of 1962 design manual note kact=80kid
1962 AISI Design Manual fastener strength (continued) • assume kact=kid only under first denominator term • remove 2 under the radical in first term as well • remaining kact = k results in 2% “rule” fasteners must have at least this much strength: Winter’s 1962 Fmin equation Brace forces resulting from Example 11 of 1962 design manual note kact=80kid Winter’s 1962 equation without empirical modification
1962 AISI Design Manual Summary of 1962 Specification • The fastener-sheathing stiffness must insure the following condition is met • The fastener-sheathing strength must insure the following condition is met • In addition to insure adequate performance in the face of potential defects • If the above conditions are met Pcr=Pcr1 (strong-axis). where
1962 AISI Design Manual Critique of 1962 Specification • The fastener-sheathing stiffness must insure the following condition is met • The fastener-sheathing strength must insure the following condition is met • In addition to insure adequate performance in the face of potential defects • If the above conditions are met Pcr=Pcr1 (strong-axis). useful, but arbitrary, does not even insure that strong axis controls couched in something theoretical, but in the end empirical, not wholly consistent with current approaches arbitrary, realistic? Underlying theory not directly applicable, no torsional-flexural buckling check, to my knowledge none of us have ever even done a k test!?
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. 1980 to 2004 AISI Specification • Also known as the Simaan and Peköz method, or the shear diaphragm model, or the “D4 method”. Existed from 1980 to 2004 in Spec. Section D4. Abandoned in favor of a return to Winter’s method, more or less. • Why was the method abandoned? • What can we learn from the “mistakes”?
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. Practical limitations of D4 method • “The design expressions are complex. The design expressions do not give credit to the presence of supplementary steel bridging which is typically installed in order to align members and to provide necessary structural integrity during erection and in the completed structure. Provided there is adequate steel bridging, the imperfect sheathing approach in Section D4 (a) can produce a lower capacity than an all steel approach. The most popular sheathing, gypsum wallboard, is seen by some as too moisture and load cycle sensitive to act as a reliable structural brace for the service life of a structure. Other restrictions in Section D4 (a) are for the most part impractical for typical use.” (Trestain 2002).
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. Theoretical limitation of the D4 Method • For the most part Winter’s method may conceptually be understood as a column supported by discrete springs: • The D4 method has never been presented with an equivalent mechanical model, instead it is always described as a summation of energies (column bending + shear distortion of diaphragm), what is underneath the hood?
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. Consider the shear energy term shear energy “shear” angle
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. Consider the shear energy term shear energy “shear” angle equivalence with rotational spring foundation:
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. Consider the shear energy term mechanically equivalent model to shear diaphragm shear energy considering discrete fasteners “shear” angle equivalence with rotational spring foundation:
1980 to 2004 AISI Spec. D4 method summary • The method was abandoned for numerous practical reasons, and now can be seen to have a serious theoretical limitation • However, lots of great and complicated mechanics in the D4 method. Torsional-flexural buckling is treated thoroughly (even for dis-similar and one-sided sheathing). • The role of shear in deforming the sheathing is real, but have to be careful with how that actually braces the stud
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) 2007 AISI-S211 Wall Stud Standard • “Wall stud assemblies using a sheathing braced design shall be designed assuming that identical sheathing is attached to both sides of the wall stud and connected to the bottom and top horizontal members of the wall to provide lateral and torsional support to the wall stud in the plane of the wall.” • “Both ends of the stud shall be connected to restrain rotation about the longitudinal stud axis and horizontal displacement perpendicular to the stud axis.” Further, in B1.2(b) it is prescribed that the global buckling load of a stud, with fasteners spaced distance “a” apart shall be determined ignoring any sheathing contribution (i.e. k = 0) over a distance of 2a, i.e.:
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) Pcr by AISI-S211-07 • It is assumed that the sheathing provides enough stiffness that Pcr ignoring the sheathing over a length equal to twice the fastener spacing, a, is always less than Pcr considering the sheathing: buckling of the stud engaging all fasteners buckling across a defective fastener
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) Pcr by AISI-S211-07 • It is assumed that the sheathing provides enough stiffness that Pcr ignoring the sheathing over a length equal to twice the fastener spacing, a, is always less than Pcr considering the sheathing: buckling of the stud engaging all fasteners buckling across a defective fastener
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) Pcr by AISI-S211-07 • It is assumed that the sheathing provides enough stiffness that Pcr ignoring the sheathing over a length equal to twice the fastener spacing, a, is always less than Pcr considering the sheathing: buckling of the stud engaging all fasteners buckling across a defective fastener validity of assumption depends on the stiffness k, as k0 definitely not a valid assumption
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) AISI-S211-07 Commentary • Wall Stud Standard provides only minor guidance, primarily wall stud design is left to rational analysis. • However, the commentary provides one such rational analysis method, relying primarily on the 2% rule for fastener demands. • Let us revisit the classic derivation to better understand the implications of the 2% rule.
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) 2% rule in AISI-S211-07 Commentary • Consider the basic derivation (supplementing the commentary)
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) 2% rule in AISI-S211-07 Commentary • Consider the basic derivation (supplementing the commentary) Finally solving for the bracing force: note, 1%P, not 2%P, but brace force is a function of k and do can be higher or lower
2007 AISI-COFS Wall Stud Standard (S211) Comparison of 1962 and 2007 methods 1962 AISI Design Manual Analyze any design Prescribed failure mode
Limit states (abridged) • Stud • Global buckling (F, T, FT – including sheathing) • should the stud be checked assuming defective fastener? • Local buckling (probably ignore sheathing) • Distortional buckling (probably including sheathing) • should the stud be checked assuming a defective fastener? • Connections • Stud-fastener-sheathing connection • Track-fastener-sheathing connection • Stud-to-track connection • Sheathing • Construction loads (requires all-steel check)
Limit states (abridged) state of development... • Stud • Global buckling (F, T, FT – including sheathing) • should the stud be checked assuming defective fastener? • Local buckling (probably ignore sheathing) • Distortional buckling (probably including sheathing) • should the stud be checked assuming a defective fastener? • Connections • Stud-fastener-sheathing connection • Track-fastener-sheathing connection • Stud-to-track connection • Sheathing • Construction loads (requires all-steel check)
Sheathing k y x w
Sheathing k y x w
When sheathing k matters? • If ksheathing<10kfastener... probably matters kfastener fastener sheathing
Getting past flexure... • Support of the stud exists for other DOF as well, and in some cases preliminary characterization has been done
Overview • Part of the AISI-COFS funded project on the design of sheathed walls with dis-similar sheathing. • Presentation developed from a report of the same name • Project updates, including full report available at www.ce.jhu.edu/bschafer/sheathedwalls • Report covers • Design methods via 1962, 1980-2004, 2007 AISI • Examination of sheathing stiffness ‘k’ • Initial summary of known demands and limit states on a sheathed wall stud in compression All for now, Thank you...
Stress distribution at Peak Load (Gray color represents yielding - connections)