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Stiffening a Corrugated Sheet

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Doodler3D

Mechanical
Jan 20, 2020
188
Hi,

What are some quick hand calcs to estimate the stiffening required for a corrugated panel? Traditionally, the general approach is to rib the hell out of the structure based on tribal knowledge, but I was hoping for a nudge in the right direction to optimize moment values for the stiffeners since the application is deflection-limited rather than stress. The 10' long, 1/4" thick panel is the base of a screw feeder. C/S for reference.

Screenshot_415_mfvobo.png
 
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You should ask the supplier for the manufacturer-supplied table for strength and deflection based on the orientation of the corrugation and span length.
 
Overseas supplier (close to the installation site) is not willing to share design calcs, except that deflections are limited to 1/8". Currently exploring local fabricators to get this done, hoping that some basic reference calcs will help them out.
 
Doddler3D said:
What are some quick hand calcs to estimate the stiffening required for a corrugated panel?

Assuming the corrugated sheets are used flat (like your sketch), take the moment of inertia (I) of a stiffener (ignore the structural properties of the corrugated sheet) to calculate deflection. This will give a conservative answer. Each stiffener will have a tributary loading area based on stiffener spacing.

Four PSI (576 lb/ft[sup]2[/sup]) is significant loading. Don't be surprised if the stiffeners seem to be ridiculously large for 1/8" deflection over a long span.

 
Use an orthotropic Kirchoff plate model that smears corrugation stiffness into the plate stiffness (google it; should be found in plate theory textbooks), suitable displacement trial function and Ritz method to solve for the corrugated plate deflection and internal forces.
 
Centondollar, thank you for that, Timoshenko's Plate book is on my desk and I'm assuming you are eluding to sections 20 onward.

SlideRuleEra, you are correct, the stiffeners are rather thick.

 
Is there some reason it has to be corrugated? Seems like an unnecessary constraint. I'd make a box section with internal ribs - cut some slots to key with vertical strips and fusion weld. The stiffness:cost ratio is easily better if stiffness is paramount which is why this sort of construction is used most everywhere and simple corrugation is used when stiffness isn't so important.
 
Dave, Its the base of a screw extruder and tight tolerances are to be maintained for the screw.
BTW, I put on my dunce cap for mixing words.
 
I'm stuck then. I see no use for a corrugated part in a screw extruder so it must be a special design and I have no idea where that part could be.
 
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