AISC 360 — Connections (Chapters J & K)
Bolt and weld design per AISC 360-16: F3125 bolts, fillet welds, bearing, slip-critical, block shear
Every structural steel member is only as strong as its connections. Chapters J and K of AISC 360-16 cover the design of bolted and welded connections for all member types, including special provisions for HSS connections. The fundamental principle: every connection must have a clearly defined load path from the member to the supporting element. Connection design targets a higher reliability index () than member design (), reflected in the lower for most connection limit states.
1. Bolt Types and Grades
ASTM F3125 is the unified bolt specification that replaced the individual standards A325, A490, F1852, and F2280. All structural bolts are now ordered under F3125 with a grade designation:
| F3125 Grade | Old Name | (N threads) | (X threads excl.) | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A325 | A325 | 54 ksi | 68 ksi | 90 ksi | Standard high-strength bolt. 120 ksi tensile. Most common. |
| A490 | A490 | 68 ksi | 84 ksi | 113 ksi | Higher strength. 150 ksi tensile. No galvanizing allowed. |
| F1852 | TC bolt (A325 equiv.) | 54 ksi | 68 ksi | 90 ksi | Twist-off type tension-control bolt. Same strength as A325. |
| F2280 | TC bolt (A490 equiv.) | 68 ksi | 84 ksi | 113 ksi | Twist-off type, A490 strength. |
2. Bolt Limit States
2.1. Bolt Shear (J3.6)
where is the nominal bolt area (unthreaded body). For a single bolt:
LRFD:
ASD:
For bolts in double shear, multiply by 2 (provided both shear planes have the same N or X condition).
2.2. Bolt Tension (J3.6)
2.3. Combined Tension and Shear (J3.7)
When a bolt is subjected to both shear and tension simultaneously, the tensile strength is reduced:
where is the required shear stress. This is an elliptical interaction check linearized for simplicity.
2.4. Bearing and Tearout (J3.10)
The connected plate must also be checked for bearing (deformation of the hole) and tearout (bolt ripping through the plate edge):
where is the clear distance from the bolt hole edge to the end of the plate or to the next bolt hole edge. The controlling value is the minimum of bearing and tearout for each bolt. .
2.5. Slip-Critical Connections (J3.8)
Slip-critical connections resist load through friction between the faying surfaces, not bearing. They are required when slip would be detrimental (e.g., oversized holes, connections subject to fatigue, or load reversal):
where:
- = slip coefficient: 0.30 (Class A, clean mill scale) or 0.50 (Class B, blast-cleaned)
- = ratio of mean installed bolt pretension to specified minimum
- = hole factor: 1.00 (standard holes), 0.85 (oversized/short-slotted), 0.70 (long-slotted)
- = minimum bolt pretension from Table J3.1 (e.g., 28 kips for 3/4" A325)
- = number of slip planes
LRFD (strength level):
LRFD (serviceability level):
ASD (strength level):
ASD (serviceability level):
3. Bolt Spacing and Edge Distances
| Requirement | Minimum | Maximum |
|---|---|---|
| Bolt spacing (center-to-center) | (preferred 3d) | min(24t, 12 in) painted; min(14t, 7 in) unpainted |
| Edge distance | Table J3.4 (e.g., 1 in for 3/4" bolt) | min(12t, 6 in) |
| End distance | Same as edge distance | — |
4. Weld Types and Strength
4.1. Complete Joint Penetration (CJP) Groove Welds
CJP groove welds develop the full strength of the connected material. No separate weld check is needed — the base metal strength governs. CJP welds are required for moment connections in seismic applications (AISC 341).
4.2. Partial Joint Penetration (PJP) Groove Welds
PJP welds have an effective throat less than the full thickness. Strength is computed using Table J2.5 with the effective weld area and the weld metal strength .
4.3. Fillet Welds — The Workhorse of Steel Connections
Fillet welds are the most common weld type in structural steel, used in over 80% of all welded connections. The strength is based on the weld throat:
= weld leg size, = weld length, = electrode classification strength. , .
Common Electrodes
| Electrode | ||
|---|---|---|
| E60XX | 60 ksi | 36.0 ksi |
| E70XX | 70 ksi | 42.0 ksi — most common |
| E80XX | 80 ksi | 48.0 ksi |
Directional Strength Increase
Fillet welds loaded transversely (perpendicular to the weld axis) are stronger than those loaded longitudinally. Section J2.4 permits:
where is the angle between the load direction and the weld axis. At (transverse), the strength increases by 50%. At (longitudinal), there is no increase.
Fillet Weld Capacity Table (E70XX, per inch of length)
| Leg Size a | Throat (0.707a) | φRn per inch (LRFD) | Rn/Ω per inch (ASD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3/16 in | 0.133 in | 4.18 kip/in | 2.78 kip/in |
| 1/4 in | 0.177 in | 5.57 kip/in | 3.71 kip/in |
| 5/16 in | 0.221 in | 6.96 kip/in | 4.64 kip/in |
| 3/8 in | 0.265 in | 8.35 kip/in | 5.57 kip/in |
| 1/2 in | 0.354 in | 11.14 kip/in | 7.42 kip/in |
5. Block Shear Rupture — Section J4.3
, . The first expression assumes rupture on the shear plane and rupture on the tension plane. The cap (second expression) limits the shear plane to yielding strength. for uniform tension stress (symmetric connections), for non-uniform tension stress (e.g., coped beam with single row of bolts).
6. Common Connection Types
| Type | Category | Key Limit States |
|---|---|---|
| Shear tab (single plate) | Simple shear | Bolt shear, bearing, plate shear yielding/rupture, block shear, weld |
| Double angle | Simple shear | Bolt shear, bearing, angle leg rupture, block shear, coped beam |
| Single angle | Simple shear | Same as double angle + eccentricity in outstanding leg |
| Seated connection | Simple shear | Seat angle bending, web crippling of beam, weld/bolt of seat |
| Extended end plate | Moment | Bolt tension, plate bending, column flange bending, panel zone shear |
| Flange plate | Moment | Plate yielding/rupture, bolt shear, column panel zone |
| Directly welded flange | Moment | CJP weld, column stiffeners, panel zone (J10.6) |
| Gusset plate (brace) | Bracing | Whitmore section, Thornton method (buckling), bolt/weld to beam/column |
Solved Example 1 — Shear Tab Connection
Given: Shear tab (single plate) connection. 3 bolts, 3/4" dia. F3125 Grade A325-N, standard holes. Plate: 1/4" × 9" A36 ( ksi, ksi). Bolt spacing = 3 in, edge distance = 1.5 in (top and bottom). Factored reaction kips.
Step 1 — Bolt Shear (single shear)
Step 2 — Bearing/Tearout on Plate
Hole dia. = 3/4 + 1/16 = 13/16 in (standard hole)
Interior bolts (2 bolts): in
Edge bolt (1 bolt): in
Step 3 — Plate Gross Shear Yielding
Step 4 — Plate Net Shear Rupture
(hole dia = 3/4 + 1/8 = 7/8 in for rupture — includes 1/16" damage allowance)
Step 5 — Block Shear
Failure path: shear along bolt line + tension across bottom edge
(symmetric, uniform tension)
Cap: kips (governs)
Summary of all limit states:
| Bolt shear | 53.7 kips | ✓ |
| Bearing/tearout | 53.4 kips | ✓ |
| Gross shear yielding | 48.6 kips | ✓ |
| Net shear rupture | 41.6 kips | ✓ |
| Block shear (controls) | 41.9 kips | ✓ |
Controlling limit state: net shear rupture at 41.6 kips (72% utilization).
Solved Example 2 — Fillet Weld Connection
Given: Double angle connection (2L 4×3×1/4) welded to a W14×48 column flange. E70XX electrode. Required reaction kips (LRFD). Weld along the outstanding leg (4 in side), both toes and heel.
Step 1 — Required Weld Size
Each angle carries half: kips per angle. Weld on both sides of the angle (two welds per angle), each weld length = 8.5 in (along the outstanding leg plus returns).
Total weld length per angle: in
Required weld strength per inch:
From the fillet weld table, a 3/16 in fillet weld provides kip/in → 3/16 in fillet weld is adequate.
Step 2 — Base Metal Check
Column flange shear rupture along the weld:
(A992 column flange: ksi, in for W14×48)
7. International Comparison — Connections
| Aspect | AISC 360 | Eurocode 3 | NBR 8800 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bolt grades | F3125 (A325/A490) | ISO 898-1 (8.8 / 10.9) | ASTM A325/A490 (same as AISC) |
| Bolt shear φ | 0.75 | 1/γM2 = 0.80 | 1/γa2 ≈ 0.74 |
| Hole deduction (rupture) | db + 1/8 in | d0 (actual hole dia) | db + 2 mm |
| Fillet weld formula | 0.60FEXX × throat | Fu/(√3 × γM2) via directional method | 0.60Fw × throat (similar) |
| Directional strength increase | 1 + 0.50 sin1.5θ | Directional method inherently captures | Same as AISC |
| Block shear | J4.3 (rupture + tension cap) | EN 1993-1-8 §3.10.2 | Similar to AISC J4.3 |