tomsing
Aerospace
- May 19, 2010
- 52
I'm looking at a significantly short beam, cantilevered, and wanted to run a hand calc to validate a FEM, so I figure I ought to include shear deformation in a deflection calc.
Blodgett, section 2.6, gives a cantilevered beam, concentrated load at the tip, deflection at the tip of aPL/GA, where a is a shape factor. Blodgett says a is the ratio of max shear stress to average stress in the section. For simplicity, call it a rectangular section, then tau_max / tau_avg = (VQ/It) / (V/A) = 3/2. And, if you take Blodgett's eqn 5 and take it to the limit of a rectangular section, you get the same, 1.5. So, Blodgett tells me that the shear deflection at the tip of the beam should be 3/2 PL/GA.
But that doesn't match my FEM. I even got down to just a stick model, make it super simple. And in doing that (I rarely work with bar elements), I notice that the transverse shear stiffness for unit length is KAG, so K here is like the inverse of Blodgett's a. But K for a rectangular section is showing up as = 5/6 (as written out by the preprocessor, FEMAP), not 2/3.
So, not having done this in a while, I dug up which gives a decent refresher on how to do Castigliano's theorem, and lo and behold, I can work my way to, shear deflection at the tip of a cantilevered beam is kPL/GA. This looks the same as Blodgett, so I looked into how they get k. They give k not as a ratio of max to average shear stress, but as an area integral, Q^2 A/(I^2 b^2) dA. For a rectangular section, Q
works out to b/2*(h^2/4 - y^2), and when you crank through the algebra and the integral and some more algebra, you come up with k = 6/5, which (when you invert it) matches what's in the FEM.
So, does Blodgett have an error? Am I missing something in how I'm applying his formula? Or is there an error in FEMAP?
Thanks for your help!
Blodgett, section 2.6, gives a cantilevered beam, concentrated load at the tip, deflection at the tip of aPL/GA, where a is a shape factor. Blodgett says a is the ratio of max shear stress to average stress in the section. For simplicity, call it a rectangular section, then tau_max / tau_avg = (VQ/It) / (V/A) = 3/2. And, if you take Blodgett's eqn 5 and take it to the limit of a rectangular section, you get the same, 1.5. So, Blodgett tells me that the shear deflection at the tip of the beam should be 3/2 PL/GA.
But that doesn't match my FEM. I even got down to just a stick model, make it super simple. And in doing that (I rarely work with bar elements), I notice that the transverse shear stiffness for unit length is KAG, so K here is like the inverse of Blodgett's a. But K for a rectangular section is showing up as = 5/6 (as written out by the preprocessor, FEMAP), not 2/3.
So, not having done this in a while, I dug up which gives a decent refresher on how to do Castigliano's theorem, and lo and behold, I can work my way to, shear deflection at the tip of a cantilevered beam is kPL/GA. This looks the same as Blodgett, so I looked into how they get k. They give k not as a ratio of max to average shear stress, but as an area integral, Q^2 A/(I^2 b^2) dA. For a rectangular section, Q
So, does Blodgett have an error? Am I missing something in how I'm applying his formula? Or is there an error in FEMAP?
Thanks for your help!