Variational method in the stability analysis of nonconservative problems

1970 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong-chung Shieh
Author(s):  
Jong-Su Bae ◽  
Taewung Kim ◽  
Hyun-Yong Jeong

There is a need for a higher mast of a reach truck in the market, but a higher mast brings a safety concern. Usually, it is more plausible to fall in the roll direction than in the pitch direction. Since a reach truck with a high mast is a heavy and its center of gravity is high, it is not easy to conduct tests to evaluate its stability. If there is a mathematical tool to evaluate the stability of a reach truck, it is easy to evaluate a design in terms of stability and to modify the design in order to increase its stability. In this study, a variational method using a total potential function was used to make a mathematical means to evaluate the stability of a reach truck. By using the mathematical means the stability of a reach truck was evaluated and compared with FE simulation results.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (20) ◽  
pp. 6129
Author(s):  
Xuan-Yi Xue ◽  
Da-Wei Du ◽  
Jun-Yi Sun ◽  
Xiao-Ting He

In the design of cantilevered balconies of buildings, many stability problems exist concerning vertical plates, in which reaching a critical load plays an important role during the stability analysis of the plate. At the same time, the concrete forming vertical plate, as a typical brittle material, has larger compressive strength but lower tensile strength, which means the tensile and compression properties of concrete are different. However, due to the complexities of such analyses, this difference has not been considered. In this study, the variational method is used to analyze stability problems of cantilever vertical plates with bimodular effect, in which different loading conditions and plate shapes are also taken into account. For the effective implementation of a variational method, the bending strain energy based on bimodular theory is established first, and critical loads of four stability problems are obtained. The results indicate that the bimodular effect, as well as different loading types and plate shapes, have influences on the final critical loads, resulting in varying degrees of buckling. In particular, if the average value of the tensile modulus and compressive modulus remain unchanged, the introduction of the bimodular effect will weaken, to some extent, the bending stiffness of the plate. Among the four stability problems, a rectangular plate with its top and bottom loaded is most likely to buckle; next is a rectangular plate with its top loaded, followed by a triangular plate with its bottom loaded. A rectangular plate with its bottom loaded is least likely to buckle. This work may serve as a theoretical reference for the refined analysis of vertical plates. Plates are made of concrete or similar material whose bimodular effect is relatively obvious and cannot be ignored arbitrarily; otherwise the greater inaccuracies will be encountered in building designs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Simon Heru Prassetyo ◽  
Ganda Marihot Simangunsong ◽  
Ridho Kresna Wattimena ◽  
Made Astawa Rai ◽  
Irwandy Arif ◽  
...  

This paper focuses on the stability analysis of the Nanjung Water Diversion Twin Tunnels using convergence measurement. The Nanjung Tunnel is horseshoe-shaped in cross-section, 10.2 m x 9.2 m in dimension, and 230 m in length. The location of the tunnel is in Curug Jompong, Margaasih Subdistrict, Bandung. Convergence monitoring was done for 144 days between February 18 and July 11, 2019. The results of the convergence measurement were recorded and plotted into the curves of convergence vs. day and convergence vs. distance from tunnel face. From these plots, the continuity of the convergence and the convergence rate in the tunnel roof and wall were then analyzed. The convergence rates from each tunnel were also compared to empirical values to determine the level of tunnel stability. In general, the trend of convergence rate shows that the Nanjung Tunnel is stable without any indication of instability. Although there was a spike in the convergence rate at several STA in the measured span, that spike was not replicated by the convergence rate in the other measured spans and it was not continuous. The stability of the Nanjung Tunnel is also confirmed from the critical strain analysis, in which most of the STA measured have strain magnitudes located below the critical strain line and are less than 1%.


1996 ◽  
Vol 308 ◽  
pp. 31-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Hwa Wang ◽  
R. Jackson ◽  
S. Sundaresan

This paper presents a linear stability analysis of a rapidly sheared layer of granular material confined between two parallel solid plates. The form of the steady base-state solution depends on the nature of the interaction between the material and the bounding plates and three cases are considered, in which the boundaries act as sources or sinks of pseudo-thermal energy, or merely confine the material while leaving the velocity profile linear, as in unbounded shear. The stability analysis is conventional, though complicated, and the results are similar in all cases. For given physical properties of the particles and the bounding plates it is found that the condition of marginal stability depends only on the separation between the plates and the mean bulk density of the particulate material contained between them. The system is stable when the thickness of the layer is sufficiently small, but if the thickness is increased it becomes unstable, and initially the fastest growing mode is analogous to modes of the corresponding unbounded problem. However, with a further increase in thickness a new mode becomes dominant and this is of an unusual type, with no analogue in the case of unbounded shear. The growth rate of this mode passes through a maximum at a certain value of the thickness of the sheared layer, at which point it grows much faster than any mode that could be shared with the unbounded problem. The growth rate of the dominant mode also depends on the bulk density of the material, and is greatest when this is neither very large nor very small.


Author(s):  
Abbas Zabihi Zonouz ◽  
Mohammad Ali Badamchizadeh ◽  
Amir Rikhtehgar Ghiasi

In this paper, a new method for designing controller for linear switching systems with varying delay is presented concerning the Hurwitz-Convex combination. For stability analysis the Lyapunov-Krasovskii function is used. The stability analysis results are given based on the linear matrix inequalities (LMIs), and it is possible to obtain upper delay bound that guarantees the stability of system by solving the linear matrix inequalities. Compared with the other methods, the proposed controller can be used to get a less conservative criterion and ensures the stability of linear switching systems with time-varying delay in which delay has way larger upper bound in comparison with the delay bounds that are considered in other methods. Numerical examples are given to demonstrate the effectiveness of proposed method.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 3663
Author(s):  
Tianlong Lei ◽  
Jixin Wang ◽  
Zongwei Yao

This study constructs a nonlinear dynamic model of articulated vehicles and a model of hydraulic steering system. The equations of state required for nonlinear vehicle dynamics models, stability analysis models, and corresponding eigenvalue analysis are obtained by constructing Newtonian mechanical equilibrium equations. The objective and subjective causes of the snake oscillation and relevant indicators for evaluating snake instability are analysed using several vehicle state parameters. The influencing factors of vehicle stability and specific action mechanism of the corresponding factors are analysed by combining the eigenvalue method with multiple vehicle state parameters. The centre of mass position and hydraulic system have a more substantial influence on the stability of vehicles than the other parameters. Vehicles can be in a complex state of snaking and deviating. Different eigenvalues have varying effects on different forms of instability. The critical velocity of the linear stability analysis model obtained through the eigenvalue method is relatively lower than the critical velocity of the nonlinear model.


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