Columns & Struts
Columns & Struts
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CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION DEFINITIONS HISTORY OF COLUMNS CLASSIFICATION OF COLUMNS FAILURE OF COLUMNS SIGN CONVENTIONS STM TYPES OF STRUTS EULERS FORMULA DERIVATIONS RANKINE FORMULA EULERS FORMULA UNDER ECCENTRIC LOADING
INTRODUCTION
COLUMNS
STRUTS
DEFINITIONS:
STRUTS: A structural member , subjected to axial compressive force, is called a strut. These may be horizontal, inclined or even vertical. COLUMNS : The vertical struts which are being used in buildings and frames are more precisely called as columns.
HISTORY
The use of columns has been done from ancient times . The most ancient traces of columns have been found in Greece, few thousands of years B.C. Later as the time proceeded the techniques of column making and materials . In the very beginning wood was used as column material which has advanced to concrete and even Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) discovered about twenty years ago.
STRUTS
STRUT AND TIE MODEL (STM)
FUNCTIONS OF STRUTS:
1. They serve as the compression chord of the truss mechanism which resists moment 2. They help in the transfer shear to the supports.
TYPES OF STRUTS
a) PRISM type(having constant width) b) BOTTLE type(width expand and contract along with length) c) FAN type(an array of struts with varying inclination meet at or radiate from a single node)
USES OF STRUTS
TO SUPPORT ROOFS
AS SUSPENSIONS IN AUTOMIBILES
TYPES OF COLUMNS
Columns are basically of two types: o LONG o SHORT / INTERMEDIATE
If Leff / r < SRc, the column is considered short/intermediate. If Leff / r > SRc, the column is considered long.
Column failures
Material failure
(crushing)
Elastic buckling
(Euler)
Inelastic buckling
Leff
(combination of buckling
SIGN CONVENTIONS
POSITIVE BENDING NEGATIVE BENDING
Eulers Formula
Sir Leonhard Euler (1707 1783)
Euler Buckling (elastic buckling)
Pcr
AE
2
KL r
A = Cross sectional area (m2) E = Modulus of elasticity of the material (N/m2) K = Stiffness (curvature mode) factor L = Column length between pinned ends (in.) r = radius of gyration (in.)
I A
Assumptions
The following assumptions are made
The column is initially straight & of uniform lateral dimensions. The compressive load is exactly axial & it passes through the centroid of the column section. The material of the column is perfectly homogenous and isotropic. Pin joints are frictionless and fixed joints are perfectly rigid.
The weight of column itself is neglected. The column fails by buckling alone. Limit of proportionality is not exceeded.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
WEBSITES:
STRENGTH OF MATERIAL