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Verification of Bending Stress and Shear Stress Distribution Across The Depth For Slender Beam

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MINI PROJECT REPORT

Verification of Bending Stress


and Shear Stress Distribution
across the Depth for Slender
Beam

NAME: Siddharth R Karde


MIS: 111201023

BRANCH: Civil Engineering

1) PHYSICS OF THE PROBLEM :


A beam of length l m and cross-section b*d is subjected a uniformly
distributed load. When a beam having an arbitrary cross section is subjected
to a transverse loads the beam will bend. In addition to bending the other
effects such as twisting and buckling may occur, and to investigate a
problem that includes all the combined effects of bending, twisting and
buckling could become a complicated one. Thus we are interested to
investigate the bending effects alone, in order to do so, we have to put
certain constraints on the geometry of the beam and the manner of loading.

INTRODUCTION
A beam deforms and stresses develop inside it when a transverse load is
applied on it. In a horizontal beam supported at the ends and loaded uniformly,
the material at the over-side of the beam is compressed while the material at the
underside is stretched. There are two forms of internal stresses caused by lateral
loads:

Shear stress parallel to the lateral loading plus complementary shear


stress on planes perpendicular to the load direction;

Direct compressive stress in the upper region of the beam, and


direct tensile stress in the lower region of the beam.

These last two forces form a couple or moment as they are equal in magnitude
and opposite in direction. This bending moment resists the sagging deformation
characteristic of a beam experiencing bending. The stress distribution in a beam
can be predicted quite accurately even when some simplifying assumptions are
used.
Assumptions: theory of bending
The constraints put on the geometry would form the assumptions:
1. Beam is initially straight, and has a constant cross-section.
2. Beam is made of homogeneous material and the beam has a longitudinal
plane of symmetry.
3. Resultant of the applied loads lies in the plane of symmetry.
4. The geometry of the overall member is such that bending not buckling is the
primary cause of failure.

5. Elastic limit is nowhere exceeded and E' is same in tension and


compression.
6. Plane cross - sections remains plane before and after bending.

GOVERNING DIFFERENTIAL EQATION


FOR BENDING STRESS
In the EulerBernoulli theory of slender beams, a major assumption is
that 'plane sections remain plane'. In other words, any deformation due to shear
across the section is not accounted for (no shear deformation). Also, this linear
distribution is only applicable if the maximum stress is less than the yield
stress of the material. For stresses that exceed yield, refer to article plastic
bending. At yield, the maximum stress experienced in the section (at the furthest
points from the neutral axis of the beam) is defined as the flexural strength.
The Euler-Bernoulli equation for the quasistatic bending of slender, isotropic,
homogeneous beams of constant cross-section under an applied transverse
load W(X) is

Where,
: Youngs modulus,
: Area moment of inertia of the cross-section,
: Deflection of the neutral axis of the beam.
After a solution for the displacement of the beam has been obtained, the
bending moment ( ) and shear force ( ) in the beam can be calculated using
the relations

FOR SHEAR STRESS


Shear Stress Distribution is given by:

Where:
V(x) : Shear force carried by the section, found from the shear force diagram.
I : Second moment of area.
t(y) : Sectional width at the distance y from the N.A.

A is the top (or bottom) portion of the members cross-sectional area, defined
from the section where t(y) is measured, and y is the distance to the centroid of
A, measured from the Neutral Axis.

BOUNDRY CONDITIONS
The beam equation contains a fourth-order derivative in . To find a
unique solution
we need four boundary conditions. The boundary
conditions usually model supports, but they can also model point loads,
distributed loads and moments. The support or displacement boundary
conditions are used to fix values of displacement ( ) and rotations (
) on
the boundary.

: DIFLECTION

X=0

X=L

ELEMENTS USED
2 dimensional beam element

: SLOPE

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