The Rayleigh-Ritz Method for Structural Analysis by Ilanko Sinniah Monterrubio Luis Mochida Yusuke

The Rayleigh-Ritz Method for Structural Analysis by Ilanko Sinniah Monterrubio Luis Mochida Yusuke

Author:Ilanko , Sinniah, Monterrubio , Luis, Mochida , Yusuke
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Wiley
Published: 2014-11-24T16:00:00+00:00


9.2. Theoretical derivations of the eigenvalue problems

In this chapter, the set of admissible functions φi (x) is taken as a combination of a complete quadratic polynomial and a cosine series, described in equation [8.2], that is:

[8.2a]

[8.2b]

[8.2c]

[8.2d]

where x is the coordinate along the beam axis, L is the beam length and n is the maximum number of terms included in the set of admissible functions.

The deflection of the beam w(x) is defined as:

[9.1]

where ω is the frequency of oscillation, t is time and W(x) is the deflected shape of the neutral line of the beam that can be expressed in terms of the set of admissible functions as

[9.2a]

or in non-dimensional form:

[9.2b]

where ξ = x / L is the non-dimensional coordinate and ai are arbitrary coefficients. Thus,

[9.3a]

[9.3b]

[9.3c]

[9.3d]

These functions combined with penalty parameters allow us to model beams with all possible combinations of boundary conditions: the classical free (F), simply supported (S) and clamped (C), as well as sliding (G) conditions.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.