Maxwell Reciprocal Diagram and Discrete Michell Frames
Maxwell Reciprocal Diagram and Discrete Michell Frames
DOI 10.1007/s00158-013-0910-0
RESEARCH PAPER
Received: 26 November 2012 / Revised: 5 February 2013 / Accepted: 6 February 2013 / Published online: 16 March 2013
The Author(s) 2013. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com
1 Introduction
Maxwell is the first word in A. G. M. Michells seminal
paper The Limits of Economy of Material in Framestructures (Michell 1904). Michell is referring to James
Clerk Maxwells paper On Reciprocal Figures, Frames,
and Diagrams of Forces (Maxwell 1870). The first equation in Michells paper (stating that the difference between
the total tension load paths and the total compression load
paths is equal to a constant is inferred from Maxwells
paper, which is also cited as the origin of reciprocal diagrams and Graphics Statics.
It should be noted that terminology has changed over the
150 years of work which form the basis of this paper. The
terms frames, structures, and trusses are used interchangeably within this paper and denote what are currently
known as trusses.
Maxwell starts with concepts from W. J. Macquorn
Rankines paper, Principle of the Equilibrium of Polyhedral Frames, (Rankine 1864) and extends the work to show
how certain trusses have reciprocal diagrams which represent the forces in the trusses. This approach had a major
impact on the field of structural engineering.
Maxwells work was interpreted and expanded by
many others including Jenkin (1869), Culmann (1864),
Cremona (1890), Wolfe (1921), and others as noted in Kurrer
(2008). It is of interest that Maxwell and Cremona considered two-dimensional form diagrams (trusses) and their
two-dimensional reciprocal force diagrams as the projection of three-dimensional polyhedra (one polyhedron for
268
2 Graphic statics
Graphical methods have been used for centuries to analyze
and design a variety of structures. In this section, we give
a brief historical review of such methods and introduce the
methodology and notation used throughout this work.
2.1 A history of graphical methods
The origin of Graphic Statics can be traced back to the writings of Simon Stevin (1586), in which a parallelogram rule
using force vectors and polygons was first used to analyze
forces in a structure. Later, Pierre Varignon (1687, 1725)
demonstrated the law of force polygon and introduced the
use of funicular polygons, but graphical (equilibrium) analysis using vectorized diagrams was not formalized until
269
1
FAB
FBC
FCD
b
2,5
FEA
e
c
FDE
d
E
(a)
(b)
A
1
2
a
1
FCA
FAB
C
FBC
(a)
c
(b)
270
FB
2
A
a
FA
1
C
FC
c
(a)
As shown in Stromberg et al. (2012), the minimal volume problem for a given set of balanced forces and nodal
connectivity can be written as follows:
x
1
|P | L
(1)
(a)
min V = min
FAB
1
3
c
2
FC
1
b
FCA
C
(a)
FBC
(b)
FA
a
3
(c)
FB
271
A
FCA
FBC
4
5
3
10 9
2
15
8
20 14
19 13
7
24 18
12
23
6
22 17
11
21 16
FAB
b
FBC
4
3
15
20
14
7
13
19
6
12
18
11
24
17
16
23
21
22
(b)
FCA
10
B
(a)
1
2
FAB
B
(a)
c
3
(b)
272
(a)
(b)
273
FCA
FAB
C
FBC
such as a bound on the feasible design space. For unconstrained 3-point or 3-force problems, from the geometrical
dependencies of the lines, it can be concluded that, except
for the following three differences, the geometry of the force
diagram is the same as the corresponding form diagram:
With the differences listed above, a certain family of discrete optimal structures can be described where force diagrams are directly proportional to their form diagrams.
Namely, if we select a discrete optimal truss with n = n
for a problem that produces = =
= = 90 , the force diagram will be self-reciprocal.
proportional matc
n
FCA
r line
mirro
FAB
FBC
FAB
FCA
3
FBC
n
b
274
6 Concluding remarks
Maxwells work on structural reciprocity and load paths
in 1864 and 1870 launched two trajectories in the theory
and design of trusses that this paper attempts to reconnect. The first trajectory was that of reciprocal diagrams
and Graphic Statics. This aspect was quickly embraced and
enlarged by Culmann, Cremona and others and widely used
by engineers as a practical method of designing and analyzing trusses. Michell, in his landmark paper Michell (1904),
starts with another aspect of Maxwells 1870 paper and
develops optimal frames of minimal total load path. The
total load path of a structure is the result of Graphic Statics
with one diagram representing the paths (lines of action) and
the reciprocal diagram representing the forces (loads). This
paper connects these two legacies of Maxwell through the
application of Graphic Statics to discrete optimal trusses. It
results in some observations worth noting:
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275
Appendix
The following table presents a summary of the reciprocal relationships between the form and force diagrams of
several optimal structures.
Form diagram
Force diagram
Dual truss
FB
I.
a
FCA
FAB
FBC
FC
c
10
11
11
FBC
3
2
4
5
3
10 9
2
15
8
20 14
19 13
7
24 18
12
23
6
22 17
11
21 16
B
FA
5
FBC
FAB
FCA
10
4
3
a
1
1
FAB
b
FB
10
FCA
11
10
II.
9
8
III.
FA
c
FA
15
20
10
4
3
14
7
13
19
6
12
18
11
24
16 17
23
21
22
FB
15
20
14
c
7
13
19
6
12
FC
18
11
24
16 17
23
21
22
c
FAB
FC
1 c
FC
1
c
2
3
4
5
A
IV.
11
10
12
11
10
12
6
7
9
5
10
11
12
2
3
a
C
a
FCA
FBC
FA
FB
I. Classical discrete Michell solution for the centrally-loaded beam (Michell 1904; Hemp 1973; Mazurek et al. 2011)
II. Two discrete Michell solutions for semi-infinite space (Michell 1904; Hemp 1973)
III. Self-reciprocal cantilever with two points of support (Chan 1960; Mazurek et al. 2011)
IV. Optimal shear bracing solution (Hemp 1973; Stromberg et al. 2012). Note: Overlaying lines have been merged
276
Form diagram
Force diagram
FAB
Dual truss
3
A
V.
1
3
FC
b
C
FCA
FA
FBC
FB
g
g
FG
FEF
FFG
G F
10
FCD
5
7
E
FGA
FA
7
5
FB
10
FE
9
8
FBC
6
5
f
FF
3
a
VI.
FAB
FDE
10
FC
FD
n n
FCA
VII.
3
6
8
C
FAB
5
4
FA
FC
B
n n
FBC
FB
A
FCA
VIII.
2
4
FBC
FAB
5
n
FA
b
FB
FC
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