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Pure Bending: Prismatic Members

Pure bending occurs when a prismatic member is subjected to opposing couples in the same plane. This produces internal stresses equivalent to a bending moment. For a symmetric member, the bending causes the cross-section to deform into a circular arc centered on the neutral plane where length remains unchanged. Strain varies linearly through the thickness, being greatest at the extreme fibers where stress is highest. The bending stress formula relates stress to position within the beam and the bending moment.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views

Pure Bending: Prismatic Members

Pure bending occurs when a prismatic member is subjected to opposing couples in the same plane. This produces internal stresses equivalent to a bending moment. For a symmetric member, the bending causes the cross-section to deform into a circular arc centered on the neutral plane where length remains unchanged. Strain varies linearly through the thickness, being greatest at the extreme fibers where stress is highest. The bending stress formula relates stress to position within the beam and the bending moment.

Uploaded by

Israa Yheaa
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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PURE BENDING

Pure Bending: Prismatic members


subjected to equal and opposite couples
acting in the same longitudinal plane

1
Loading Types
• ECCENTRIC LOADING: AXIAL LOADING WHICH
DOES NOT PASS THROUGH SECTION CENTROID
PRODUCES INTERNAL FORCES EQUIVALENT TO
AN AXIAL FORCE AND A COUPLE
• TRANSVERSE LOADING: CONCENTRATED OR
DISTRIBUTED TRANSVERSE LOAD PRODUCES
INTERNAL FORCES EQUIVALENT TO A SHEAR
FORCE AND A COUPLE

• PRINCIPLE OF SUPERPOSITION: THE NORMAL


STRESS DUE TO PURE BENDING MAY BE
COMBINED WITH THE NORMAL STRESS DUE TO
AXIAL LOADING AND SHEAR STRESS DUE TO
SHEAR LOADING TO FIND THE COMPLETE STATE
OF STRESS.
2
Symmetric Member in Pure Bending
• Internal forces in any cross section are equivalent to
a couple. The moment of the couple is the section
bending moment.
• From statics, a couple M consists of two equal and
opposite forces.
• The sum of the components of the forces in any
direction is zero.
• The moment is the same about any axis
perpendicular to the plane of the couple and zero
about any axis contained in the plane.
• The moment is the same about any axis
perpendicular to the plane of the couple and zero
about any axis contained in the plane.

Fx    x dA  0
M y   z x dA  0
M z    y x dA  M
3
Bending Deformations
BEAM WITH A PLANE OF SYMMETRY IN PURE BENDING:
• member remains symmetric
• bends uniformly to form a circular arc
• cross-sectional plane passes through arc center
and remains planar
• length of top decreases and length of bottom
increases

• a neutral surface must exist that is parallel to the


upper and lower surfaces and for which the length
does not change

• a neutral surface must exist that is parallel to the


upper and lower surfaces and for which the length
does not change

4
Strain Due to Bending
Consider a beam segment of length L.
After deformation, the length of the neutral surface
remains L. At other sections,

L     y 
  L  L     y      y
 y y
x    (strain varies linearly)
L  
c c
m  or ρ
 m
y
 x   m
c

5
Stress Due to Bending
• For a linearly elastic material,
y
 x  E x   E m
c
y
   m (stress varies linearly)
c
For static equilibrium
y • For static equilibrium,
Fx  0    x dA     m dA  y 
c M    y x dA    y   m  dA
 c 

0   m  y dA   I
c M  m  y 2 dA  m
c c
First moment with respect to neutral plane is Mc M
zero. Therefore, the neutral surface must pass m  
I S
through the section centroid.
y
Substituti ng  x    m
c
My
x  
I 6
Deformations in a Transverse Cross
Section
• Deformation due to bending moment M is quantified by the
curvature of the neutral surface
1   1 Mc
 m  m 
 c Ec Ec I
M

EI
• Although cross sectional planes remain planar when
subjected to bending moments, in-plane
deformations are nonzero,

y y
 y  x  z  x 
 
• Expansion above the neutral surface and contraction
below it cause an in-plane curvature,
1 
  anticlastic curvature
  7

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