egc
Structural
- Oct 11, 2002
- 38
I need to aproximate the deflection stiffness of an "L" shape frame (one with a vertical section supporting a shorter horizontal section - see attached *.png). The existing steel supporting the vertical member (not shown in picture) is assumed to provide complete fixity.
I am going to assume small rotations and deformations to keep it all in the elastic range. For discussion purposes, assume the point load at the end of the horizontal member. I'm using Stadd Pro to validate my equations and I'm clearly missing something; I'm assuming its the partial fixity of the cantilevered horizontal member.
Where:
Member S1 has length = L1 and IZ = I1
Member S2 has length = L2 and IZ = I2
Then the vertical deflection at point P2 can be approximated as:
[Part 1] [Part 2]
Delta = (P*L2^3 / (3*E*I2)) + (2 * L2 * sin(P * L2 * L1 / (E * I1)))
Part 1 is simply the fixed cantilever deflection w/ a point load at the end.
Part 2 is the deflection caused by rotation at P1 from the moment applied at P1. The 2 at the front of part 2 is my assumption to account for the partially fixity of member S1.
Where am I going wrong?
I am going to assume small rotations and deformations to keep it all in the elastic range. For discussion purposes, assume the point load at the end of the horizontal member. I'm using Stadd Pro to validate my equations and I'm clearly missing something; I'm assuming its the partial fixity of the cantilevered horizontal member.
Where:
Member S1 has length = L1 and IZ = I1
Member S2 has length = L2 and IZ = I2
Then the vertical deflection at point P2 can be approximated as:
[Part 1] [Part 2]
Delta = (P*L2^3 / (3*E*I2)) + (2 * L2 * sin(P * L2 * L1 / (E * I1)))
Part 1 is simply the fixed cantilever deflection w/ a point load at the end.
Part 2 is the deflection caused by rotation at P1 from the moment applied at P1. The 2 at the front of part 2 is my assumption to account for the partially fixity of member S1.
Where am I going wrong?