shear beam
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Author(s):  
Maria I. Todorovska ◽  
Eyerusalem A. Girmay ◽  
Fangbo Wang ◽  
Mohammadtaghi Rahmani

2021 ◽  
Vol 1205 (1) ◽  
pp. 012023
Author(s):  
D Lehký ◽  
R Pukl ◽  
D Novák ◽  
M Lipowczan

Abstract Computational-experimental methodology based on artificial neural networks used to identify the material parameters of fibre-reinforced cementitious composite is presented and applied for Ohno shear beam test. The aim is to provide techniques for an advanced assessment of the mechanical fracture properties of these materials, and the subsequent numerical simulation of components/structures made from them. The paper describes the development of computational and material models utilized for efficient material parameter determination with regards to a studied composite. The data is used in inverse analysis based on artificial neural networks together with sensitivity analysis which plays an important role in the process. Developed software tool FRCID-S is also briefly described.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Qihua Ma ◽  
Shiwei Niu ◽  
Huaguo Wang ◽  
Weixiang Ma ◽  
Lihui Chi ◽  
...  

The rock burst caused by geological structures is abrupt and destructive, and the special structure of a graben fault decides the uniqueness of mine ground pressure in the mining process. By simplifying the graben fault structure, the evolution law of roof stress during the recovery process was studied based on the theory of the elastic shear beam. The change laws of stress field and displacement nearby the fault during the advancement process of the working face were explored through a numerical simulation, and the instability mechanism and laws of rock strata nearby this graben fault were revealed. This study will be of great significance for preventing and controlling the rock burst in the graben fault.


Author(s):  
Mohamed-Ouejdi Belarbi ◽  
Aman Garg ◽  
Mohammed-Sid-Ahmed Houari ◽  
Hicham Hirane ◽  
Abdelouahed Tounsi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 003685042110259
Author(s):  
Yinqi Li ◽  
Feng Liu ◽  
Wenming Cheng

The buckling behavior of latticed columns had been widely investigated based on the theory of Euler, Engesser and Timoshenko shear beam. Although these methods had been formulated and proved to be accurate in case of special assumptions, the influences of lacing bars on the buckling behavior of latticed columns were unclear. This paper modeled a general four-legged latticed column to study the influence of the cross-section characteristics of lacing bars along with their imperfections on the buckling capacity of latticed columns. Three loading conditions and four geometric imperfect models were built to testify the performance of lacing bars. To calculate the buckling load of latticed columns with imperfections accurately, advanced nonlinear analytical procedures using Newton-Raphson incremental-iterative method (ANAP-NR) and Risk arc-length incremental-iterative method (ANAP-Risk) were developed, and then validated by FE software ABAQUS. The current data in the paper show the maximum variation on the critical buckling load of latticed columns, caused by the cross-section area, the bending moment of inertia outer lacing plane, and the imperfections of lacing bars, could reach 68%, 30%, and 25%. The analytical results indicate the great importance of lacing bars on the buckling capacity of latticed columns.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehran Rahmani ◽  
Manan Naik

This report presents a wave method to be used for the structural identification and damage detection of structural components in bridges, e.g., bridge piers. This method has proven to be promising when applied to real structures and large amplitude responses in buildings (e.g., mid-rise and high-rise buildings). This study is the first application of the method to damaged bridge structures. The bridge identification was performed using wave propagation in a simple uniform shear beam model. The method identifies a wave velocity for the structure by fitting an equivalent uniform shear beam model to the impulse response functions of the recorded earthquake response. The structural damage is detected by measuring changes in the identified velocities from one damaging event to another. The method uses the acceleration response recorded in the structure to detect damage. In this study, the acceleration response from a shake-table four-span bridge tested to failure was used. Pairs of sensors were identified to represent a specific wave passage in the bridge. Wave velocities were identified for several sensor pairs and various shaking intensities are reported; further, actual observed damage in the bridge was compared with the detected reductions in the identified velocities. The results show that the identified shear wave velocities presented a decreasing trend as the shaking intensity was increased, and the average percentage reduction in the velocities was consistent with the overall observed damage in the bridge. However, there was no clear correlation between a specific wave passage and the observed reduction in the velocities. This indicates that the uniform shear beam model was too simple to localize the damage in the bridge. Instead, it provides a proxy for the overall extent of change in the response due to damage.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 623
Author(s):  
Van-Linh Ngo ◽  
Changho Lee ◽  
Jae-Min Kim

It is essential to reduce structural damages caused by earthquakes in severe conditions, such as layered ground, especially when a soft soil layer is close to the surface. In this study, the kinematic and inertial interactions, two mechanisms of soil–foundation–structure interaction (SFSI), of different soil–foundation–structure systems (SFS) were investigated on uniform and layered grounds. Two layered soil profiles composed of a low stiffness layer laid over another were prepared in an equivalent shear beam container. Nine centrifuge experiments were carried out for three structures located on the surface of each ground and exposed to the Hachinohe earthquake while increasing the peak acceleration of the input motion. Numerical simulations were performed to simulate the centrifuge tests. It was found that roof motion (RM) of the tall structure increased in layered profile even though the free-field motion (FFM) decreased compared to homogeneous ground. The appearance of a soft layer beneath structures modifies the SFS system’s stiffness that causes kinematic and inertial interactions to alter to those on uniform soil profile.


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