MECHANICS - CASE STUDY SOLUTION
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Initial Conditions
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This problem involves both temperature and mechanical loads. Furthermore, the
ceiling will restrict the overall deflection of the pole as the temperature increases.
The ceiling restriction makes this an indeterminate problem to the first degree
(one redundant support or restraint). As such, in addition to the standard equilibrium
equations, one compatibility relationship is needed to solve this problem.
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Compatibility Relationship
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Compatibility Relationship
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When all loads, including
thermal, are applied, the structure will have a set deflection,
which can be used to define the compatibility condition.
Using the concept of superposition, each type of deflection can be isolated.
The first deflection, is due to the two shelf loads, F1 and F2, labeled δF. These
will compress the pole.
Next, the temperature change will cause the pole
to increase by δT. This deflection assumes
there is no ceiling. But there is a ceiling that will restrict the deflection
and cause a compression force and deflection, δR.
The total deflection cannot exceed the initial gap of 1 mm. Thus, the compatibility
relationship is
-δF + δT - δR
= 1 mm
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Pipe Cross-Section |
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Before finding the pole deflections, the cross-sectional area of the pipe needs
to be calculated.
A = π (2.52 -
2.252) cm2
=
3.731 cm2 = 0.0003731 m2
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Deflections
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Load Deflection Using Superposition
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Load Deflection
The two loads, F1 and F2, each cause the pole to decrease
in length. The deflection from each load can be added together using the principle
of superposition, giving the total deflection from the applied loads as
δF = δF1 + δF2
δF = 0.0004842
m = 0.4842 mm
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Thermal Deflection without Ceiling |
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Thermal Deflection
The expansion of the pole due to the temperature change (assuming no ceiling) is
δF =
L α ΔT
= (2.4 m - 0.001
m) (23 × 10-6/oC) (50oC - 20oC)
= 0.0016553 m = 1.6553 mm
This total thermal deflection may not be possible due to the ceiling. If it
is too great, the ceiling will induce a reaction force into the pole that must
be considered. This is calculated in the next paragraph.
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Reaction with Ceiling |
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Ceiling Reaction Deflection
It is assumed that the pole will expand enough for the pole to press against
the ceiling. This will cause a reaction force on the pole that will compress
the pole. The total compression load is not known but is related to the deflection,
=
8.8081 × 10-8 R2 m =
0.000088081 R2 mm
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Solving for the Reactions
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Now that all the deflections have been established, they can be substituted
into the compatibility relationship,
-δF + δT - δR =
1 mm
-0.4842 + 1.6553 - 0.000088081 R2
= 1.0
R2 = 1,943 N
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Applied and Reaction Loads |
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The reaction is positive, thus the initial assumption that the ceiling will
cause compression was correct.
The floor reaction can be found by using the static equilibrium equation,
ΣFy =
0
R1 - F1 - F2 -
R2 = 0
R1 = (-5.494 - 5.494 - 1.943) kN
R1 =
12.93 kN
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