TAGGED: static-structural, stiffness
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October 21, 2020 at 8:30 pm
FedeZappa
SubscriberHello everybody. nhow can I relate the Foundation Stiffness offered by a circular section beam with its elastic modulus?nThe only thing that I came up with is the following:nI set the elastic support on an area equal to the cross section area of the beam, and then I set the Foundation Stiffness dividing the elastic modulus for the length of the beam. nThe resulting units are correct, and I believe also the physics are correct, but I really would like a confirmation of that.Thank you very much,nFedericon -
October 22, 2020 at 4:02 am
peteroznewman
Subscribern I found a pdf file while searching on Foundation Stiffness.nAre you asking about Foundation Stiffness for a pile in soil?n -
October 22, 2020 at 1:48 pm
FedeZappa
SubscriberHi Peter,I tried to be as general as possible, but probably that was not the best idea. nBasically, I'm trying to model a plate that divide 2 volumes. The two volumes pressure is different, and the differential pressure deform the plate. nThe focus of my study is the deformation of this plate. nSince I want to reduce the deformation of the plate, I thought about using a screw that try to keep in place the plate mitigating the deformation. nI'm not interested in the screw, I'm interested in the effect that this screw have on the plate deformation, so, I thought about modeling it with an elastic support. nThe problem is that I'm not sure about how to set the elastic foundation stiffness support.nIn the image attached you can see a schematic and a summary of what I wrote up here.n
Thank you for your patience,nnFedericon
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October 23, 2020 at 2:38 am
peteroznewman
SubscribernThe stiffness of a bolt is AE/L where A is the cross-sectional area, E is the Young's Modulus and L is the length of the bolt.n -
October 23, 2020 at 3:08 pm
FedeZappa
SubscriberI agree with you, however, the model asks me to input an EFS value. that is in [F/L^3]. The stiffness unit is [F/L].nShould I just divide the stiffness for the area of the bolt? So, Basically the EFS will be equal to E/L, where E is the Young's Modulus and L the length of the bolt.This, value, applied to an area equal to the screw cross section will result in a stiffness that it's exactly the same of the stiffness provided by the bolt. nAm I right?nThank you very much, nFedericon -
October 24, 2020 at 1:32 am
peteroznewman
SubscriberIt sounds right to me.n
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