jmggks
Structural
- Mar 16, 2015
- 29
I am trying to figure out how to design a beam to absorb the impact from a falling object. A conveyor carries 13,000 lb. parts over an industrial enclosure that we are building. The customer wants the roof beams to protect the people inside if a part falls from the conveyor. The fall distance is only 1 ft. It's okay if the beams are damaged in the process as long as they do not give way.
Using Blodgett's Design of Welded Structures 2.8-5, I can assume a beam size, calculate the elastic spring rate for a simply supported beam, and solve for the applied force. In this case, 16 ft. span, assume W10x49 beam, and this solves to P=143 kips. But it would only take 82 kips to produce FuZ for this beam, so this would seem to indicate that I need a bigger beam ... which will give me a stiffer spring rate ... which will give me a higher force ... which will require an even larger beam ... and so on and so on never reaching a solution.
I know the problem with this analysis is that the spring rate of the beam will drop by orders of magnitude once it reaches yield, which will lessen the force. Using an elastic spring rate is the problem. I think what I need to do is to equate the potential energy delivered by the dropped part to the energy absorbing capacity of the beam at rupture. Can anyone point me to a method for doing this?
Thanks for your input.
Using Blodgett's Design of Welded Structures 2.8-5, I can assume a beam size, calculate the elastic spring rate for a simply supported beam, and solve for the applied force. In this case, 16 ft. span, assume W10x49 beam, and this solves to P=143 kips. But it would only take 82 kips to produce FuZ for this beam, so this would seem to indicate that I need a bigger beam ... which will give me a stiffer spring rate ... which will give me a higher force ... which will require an even larger beam ... and so on and so on never reaching a solution.
I know the problem with this analysis is that the spring rate of the beam will drop by orders of magnitude once it reaches yield, which will lessen the force. Using an elastic spring rate is the problem. I think what I need to do is to equate the potential energy delivered by the dropped part to the energy absorbing capacity of the beam at rupture. Can anyone point me to a method for doing this?
Thanks for your input.