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Lecture 4A Stiffness Method Beam Examples

This document provides three examples of solving for the stiffness of propped cantilever beams and fixed-fixed beams using the stiffness method. It also explains how distributed loads on beams can be modeled as equivalent nodal forces and moments for use in the stiffness method. Key steps include deriving the beam element stiffness matrices, assembling the total stiffness matrix, applying boundary conditions, and solving the beam stiffness equations. Distributed loads are replaced by concentrated nodal forces and moments having the same effect on the beam as the actual distributed load.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
109 views12 pages

Lecture 4A Stiffness Method Beam Examples

This document provides three examples of solving for the stiffness of propped cantilever beams and fixed-fixed beams using the stiffness method. It also explains how distributed loads on beams can be modeled as equivalent nodal forces and moments for use in the stiffness method. Key steps include deriving the beam element stiffness matrices, assembling the total stiffness matrix, applying boundary conditions, and solving the beam stiffness equations. Distributed loads are replaced by concentrated nodal forces and moments having the same effect on the beam as the actual distributed load.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Stiffness Method Beam Examples

Example # 1

Solve the propped cantilever beam subjected to end load P. The beam is
assumed to have constant EI and length 2L. It is supported by a roller at
mid length and is built in at the right end.

The beam element stiffness matrices are:

The total stiffness matrix is:

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The beam stiffness equations are:

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Example # 2

The beam stiffness equations are:

The boundary conditions are

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Example # 3

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Distributed Loadings

Beam members can support distributed loading as well as concentrated nodal


loading. Therefore, we must be able to account for distributed loading. Consider
the fixed-fixed beam subjected to a uniformly distributed loading w shown the
figure below. The reactions, determined from structural analysis theory, are
called fixed-end reactions. In general, fixed-end reactions are those reactions at
the ends of an element if the ends of the element are assumed to be fixed
(displacements and rotations are zero). Therefore, guided by the results from
structural analysis for the case of a uniformly distributed load, we replace the
load by concentrated nodal forces and moments tending to have the same effect
on the beam as the actual distributed load.

Fixed-fixed beam subjected to a uniformly distributed load

Fixed-end reactions for the above beam

(a) Beam with a distributed load, (b) the equivalent nodal force system,

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The enlarged beam (for clarity’s sake) with equivalent nodal force system when
node 5 is added to the mid span.

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