HagarTopeka
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 25, 2009
- 4
I'm trying to optimize positioning of three masses to achieve the minimum kL/r about any axis.
I initially maximized moment of inertia, within my geometric constraints, about the structure's xx and yy axes, but got the correct and flawed answer, Drawing 1 in the attached file. I've realized that I need to step up to a vector system considering any axis, and that I need to minimize kL/r, since my unbraced lengths are different in different axes.
However, I'm having trouble determining L when a brace is not perpendicular to the axis being considered. The situation is shown in Drawing 2. The brace is more flexible than the column, so I am considering k to be constant for buckling about all axes.
How you determine the unbraced length of a column when it is braced in a direction that is not perpendicular to the axis of bending? I need to go deeper than the conservative answer of considering the column to be braced only in the perpendicular direction.
Thank you for your help!
I initially maximized moment of inertia, within my geometric constraints, about the structure's xx and yy axes, but got the correct and flawed answer, Drawing 1 in the attached file. I've realized that I need to step up to a vector system considering any axis, and that I need to minimize kL/r, since my unbraced lengths are different in different axes.
However, I'm having trouble determining L when a brace is not perpendicular to the axis being considered. The situation is shown in Drawing 2. The brace is more flexible than the column, so I am considering k to be constant for buckling about all axes.
How you determine the unbraced length of a column when it is braced in a direction that is not perpendicular to the axis of bending? I need to go deeper than the conservative answer of considering the column to be braced only in the perpendicular direction.
Thank you for your help!