Column Splice Types per EN 1993-1-8
End Plate Splice
Two columns with pre-welded end plates are bolted together with bolts passing through both plates. The end plates are typically 20-50 mm thick and project beyond the column flanges to accommodate the bolt circle. This type is common in UK and Irish practice for H-section columns up to approximately 350 mm depth.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Typical column range | HEA/HEB 160âÃÂÃÂ320, UC 152âÃÂÃÂ305 |
| Bolt arrangement | 4âÃÂÃÂ8 bolts, M20âÃÂÃÂM30, Class 8.8 or 10.9 |
| End plate thickness | 20âÃÂÃÂ50 mm, S355 |
| Flange weld | Full-penetration butt weld or 10-12 mm FW |
| Web weld | 6-8 mm fillet weld |
Division Plate Splice
A single thick plate (division plate) is sandwiched between the upper and lower column ends. Flange cover plates transfer the flange forces, and web cover plates transfer shear. This type is preferred in continental European practice and for heavier columns where end plate splices become impractical.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Typical column range | HEA/HEB 260âÃÂÃÂ1000, HD sections |
| Division plate thickness | 25âÃÂÃÂ65 mm, S355 |
| Flange cover plates | 2 ÃÂàplates, 15âÃÂÃÂ40 mm thick |
| Bolt rows | 2âÃÂÃÂ4 per flange side, M24âÃÂÃÂM36 |
| Web cover plates | 2 ÃÂàplates, 10âÃÂÃÂ20 mm thick |
Design Forces at a Column Splice
EN 1993-1-8 Clause 6.2.7.1 requires the splice to resist the following design actions:
- Axial compression N_Ed — transferred through bearing and bolts
- Major-axis moment M_y,Ed — transferred as a tension-compression couple through the flanges
- Minor-axis moment M_z,Ed — transferred through flange bolts and web bolts
- Shear V_Ed — transferred through the web splice or direct bearing of end plates
For typical braced frames, the splice is located at approximately mid-storey height (point of contraflexure for minor-axis buckling), which minimises the moment demand. A minimum eccentricity moment of N_Ed ÃÂÃÂ h/200 should be considered per EN 1993-1-1 Clause 5.3.2(3) unless a more rigorous second-order analysis is performed.
End Plate Splice — Design Procedure
Flange Force Distribution
The flange forces in an end plate splice under combined compression and moment are:
N_f,Ed = (N_Ed / 2) + (M_y,Ed / (h_c âÃÂàt_f))
Where the upper sign applies to the compression flange (compression increases) and the lower sign to the tension flange (compression reduces, may become tension).
Compression Flange Check
The compression flange transfers force through direct bearing of the end plates. EN 1993-1-8 Clause 6.2.7.1(4) allows the axial compression to be transferred entirely through bearing provided the contact surfaces are prepared (machined or close-sawn) and the bolts are tightened to at least snug-tight condition. No bolt slip is detrimental to this load path.
Bearing stress at the flange interface: ÃÂÃÂ_b,Ed = N_f,Ed / (b_f ÃÂàt_f) âÃÂä f_y / ÃÂó_M0
Tension Flange Check (if applicable)
If the moment is large enough to produce net tension in one flange, the bolts must transfer that tension. The tension flange force is resisted by the bolts in the tension zone acting through the end plates in a T-stub configuration (Clause 6.2.4).
F_t,Ed = max(0, |(N_Ed / 2) âÃÂà(M_y,Ed / (h_c âÃÂàt_f))|)
Bolt Check per Flange Side
For end plate splices with n_bolt bolts per flange side:
- Shear: V_Ed,bolt = (N_f,Ed + T_f) / n_bolt (where T_f is any required preload)
- Bearing: F_b,Rd per EN 1993-1-8 Table 3.4
- Combined: (F_v,Ed / F_v,Rd)ÃÂò + (F_t,Ed / F_t,Rd)ÃÂò âÃÂä 1.0 (if tension present)
Division Plate Splice — Design Procedure
Flange Cover Plate Capacity
Flange cover plates transfer the flange axial force between the upper and lower column sections:
A_cover âÃÂÃÂ¥ N_f,Ed / (f_y / ÃÂó_M0)
Typical cover plate thickness: t_cover âÃÂÃÂ¥ max(0.5 ÃÂàt_f, 15 mm)
Cover plate bolt group: designed per EN 1993-1-8 Clause 3.6 for the full flange force.
Longitudinal spacing: 4d_0 minimum, 14t_min or 200 mm maximum (EN 1993-1-8 Table 3.3).
Division Plate Bearing
The division plate transfers the total column axial compression. Bearing check per EN 1993-1-8 Clause 6.2.7.1(5):
ÃÂÃÂ_c,Ed = N_Ed / A_division âÃÂä f_y / ÃÂó_M0
Division plate thickness should be at least 1.5 ÃÂÃÂ t_f (column flange thickness) to ensure adequate load distribution into the column section beyond.
Worked Example — HEB 260 End Plate Splice
| Parameter | Symbol | Value | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Column | — | HEB 260, S355 | — |
| Axial compression | N_Ed | 1,850 | kN |
| Major-axis moment | M_y,Ed | 65 | kNÃÂ÷m |
| Shear | V_Ed | 45 | kN |
| End plate | — | 460 ÃÂÃÂ 280 ÃÂÃÂ 35 mm, S355 | — |
| Bolts per flange | — | 4 ÃÂÃÂ M24, Class 8.8 (8 total) | — |
| Bolt gauge | g | 180 | mm |
Step 1 — Flange Forces
Flange force from compression + moment couple: Lever arm: z = h_c âÃÂàt_f = 260 âÃÂà17.5 = 242.5 mm
Compression flange: N_f,c = 1,850/2 + 65/0.2425 = 925 + 268 = 1,193 kN Tension flange: N_f,t = 1,850/2 âÃÂà65/0.2425 = 925 âÃÂà268 = 657 kN
Both flanges remain in compression — no net tension.
Step 2 — End Plate Bearing Check
Flange interface bearing (machined surface): ÃÂÃÂ_b = 1,193,000 / (260 ÃÂÃÂ 17.5) = 1,193,000 / 4,550 = 262.2 MPa
Allowable bearing: f_y / ÃÂó_M0 = 355 / 1.00 = 355 MPa Utilisation = 262.2 / 355 = 0.739 — OK for machined bearing
Step 3 — Bolt Shear Check (Construction Phase)
During erection before full bearing develops, bolts carry the self-weight of the upper column length (assumed 3.5 m storey height, HEB 260 mass = 93 kg/m):
Erection shear per bolt: V_Ed,erect = (93 ÃÂÃÂ 3.5 ÃÂÃÂ 9.81 / 1000) / 8 = 3.19 / 8 = 0.40 kN — negligible
Post-construction, horizontal shear V_Ed = 45 kN transferred through end plate friction: Friction force = N_Ed ÃÂàÃÂü = 1,850 ÃÂà0.30 = 555 kN >> 45 kN — OK
Step 4 — Bolt Design for Robustness
Even though bolts are not structurally required for compression transfer, they must satisfy robustness requirements. Check 8 ÃÂÃÂ M24 Class 8.8 bolts in double shear through 2 ÃÂÃÂ 35 mm end plates:
Single shear per bolt plane: F_v,Rd = 0.6 ÃÂÃÂ 800 ÃÂÃÂ 353 / 1.25 = 135.6 kN Double shear (two planes): F_v,Rd,total = 2 ÃÂÃÂ 135.6 = 271.1 kN per bolt
Total shear capacity = 8 ÃÂÃÂ 271.1 = 2,169 kN > 1,850 kN — OK
The bolt capacity exceeds the column squash load, providing adequate robustness should bearing be lost (e.g., during a fire or impact scenario).
Splice Location Guidelines
| Storey Height | Typical Splice Location | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 3.0âÃÂÃÂ4.0 m | 1.5 m above floor level | Mid-storey, point of contraflexure |
| 4.0âÃÂÃÂ5.5 m | 1.8âÃÂÃÂ2.0 m above floor | Minimises moment in the splice |
| > 5.5 m | Two splices per storey | Column delivery length constraint |
The splice should also respect practical constraints: column sections are typically delivered in lengths up to 12-15 m (articulated lorry) or 18 m (extendable trailer). The splice location must allow safe access for the steel erector — typically at least 600 mm above the finished floor level to provide working space for bolt tightening.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between an end plate splice and a division plate splice? An end plate splice uses two end plates (one pre-welded to each column end) bolted together face-to-face. This is a compact, shop-welded solution ideal for lighter columns (HEB 160-320 range) and provides direct bearing for compression transfer. A division plate splice uses a single thick plate sandwiched between column ends, with separate flange and web cover plates bolted across the splice. This is preferred for heavy columns (HEB 300 and above), seismic-resisting frames where ductile behaviour is required, and where site adjustment of column length is necessary. Division plate splices provide better tolerance for fabrication errors because the division plate can be machined to exact thickness.
How are column splices checked for combined compression and moment? EN 1993-1-8 Clause 6.2.7.1 requires the splice to resist the full design actions at splice level. The flange forces are calculated from the elastic section properties: N_f = N_Ed ÃÂà(A_f / A) ÃÂñ M_y,Ed / (h_c âÃÂàt_f). The compression flange force is transferred through bearing (machined surfaces), while any tension must be carried by bolts through the end plate or cover plate in bending. The web carries its proportional share of axial force plus any shear. For braced frames where the splice is at the point of contraflexure, the moment is typically small and the splice is compression-dominated. For unbraced frames or splice locations away from inflection points, the moment component becomes significant and may require tension capacity in the flange bolts.
What are the erection stability requirements for column splices? EN 1993-1-8 Clause 6.2.7.1(6) requires the splice to have adequate strength and stiffness during erection, before the full connection is made and before the concrete slab provides lateral restraint. The splice must resist the self-weight of the upper column and any temporary construction loads (typically 1.0 kN/mÃÂò over the tributary area). At least 25% of the bolts must be in position and snug-tight before the crane hook is released. For bolted end plate splices, this means at least 2 bolts per flange. For cover plate splices, at least one bolt per cover plate. Temporary erection angles or cleats are often used to locate the upper column and provide stability while bolts are installed.
How are splice bolts checked for slip resistance in Category C connections? For Category C slip-resistant connections per EN 1993-1-8 Clause 3.4.2, the splice bolts must be preloaded (to EN 14399 or EN 1090-2) and checked for slip resistance at the serviceability limit state (SLS) in addition to bearing at ULS. The slip resistance per bolt is F_s,Rd = k_s ÃÂàn_s ÃÂàÃÂü ÃÂàF_p,C / ÃÂó_M3, where k_s accounts for hole type (1.0 for normal holes), n_s is the number of friction interfaces (2 for a cover plate with bolts in double shear), ÃÂü is the slip factor (0.30 for surfaces blasted to SA 2.5, 0.40 for surfaces blasted and painted with frictional coating), and F_p,C is the preload force (247 kN for M24 8.8 per EN 14399). For splices where slip would be detrimental (e.g., moment-resisting frames with tight drift limits), Category C is specified. For most column splices in simple construction, Category A (bearing type) is sufficient.
Design Resources
- EN 1993 Column Design — Buckling per EN 1993-1-1
- EN 1993 End Plate Connection Design
- EN 1993 Bolt Group Capacity — Eccentric Load
- EN 1993 Bolt Bearing and Tearout — Clause 3.6
- EN 1993 Steel Grade Properties — f_y and f_u
- European Steel Beam Sizes — IPE, HEA, HEB
- All European Reference Guides
Reference only. Verify all values against the current edition of EN 1993-1-8:2005 Clause 6.2.7 and the applicable National Annex. Design calculations must be independently verified by a licensed Structural Engineer. This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute professional engineering advice.