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Slope Deflection Method

The document describes the slope-deflection method of analyzing beams and frames. This method relates the moments at beam ends to the corresponding rotations and displacements. Equilibrium equations are written for each node in terms of deflections and rotations. Solving these equations determines the generalized displacements and reduces the structure to a determinate system where moments can be determined from moment-displacement relations. The procedure involves identifying the number of beam segments and unknowns, generating governing equations for each segment, writing equilibrium equations for each unknown, and solving the system of equations.

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50% found this document useful (2 votes)
320 views

Slope Deflection Method

The document describes the slope-deflection method of analyzing beams and frames. This method relates the moments at beam ends to the corresponding rotations and displacements. Equilibrium equations are written for each node in terms of deflections and rotations. Solving these equations determines the generalized displacements and reduces the structure to a determinate system where moments can be determined from moment-displacement relations. The procedure involves identifying the number of beam segments and unknowns, generating governing equations for each segment, writing equilibrium equations for each unknown, and solving the system of equations.

Uploaded by

maylaleiborday
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BEAM

is the second of the two classical methods presented in this course. This method considers the deflection as the primary unknowns, while the redundant forces were used in the force method. In the slope-deflection method, the relationship is established between moments at the ends of the members and the corresponding rotations and displacements. The basic assumption used in the slope-deflection method is that a typical member can flex but the shear and axial deformation are negligible. It is no different from that used with the force method. Kinematically indeterminate structures versus statically indeterminate structures:

Redundants: 1 (By) Kinematics: 1 (B)

Redundants: 1 (By) Kinematics: 3 (A ,B, C)

Redundants: 2 (BY, CY) Kinematics: 2 (B, C)

Redundants:1(CY) Kinematics: 3 (B ,C ,X)

Redundants: 6 Kinematics: 1 (B)

Sign convention: All clockwise internal moments and end rotation are positive.

The

basic idea of the slope deflection method is to write the equilibrium equations for each node in terms of the deflections and rotations. Solve for the generalized displacements. Using moment-displacement relations, moments are then known. The structure is thus reduced to a determinate structure.

where Case A: fixed-end moments

Case B: rotation at A

Case C: rotation at B

Case D: displacement of end B related to end A

General Procedure: Step 1: Scan the beam and identify the number of (a) segments and (b) kinematic unknowns. A segment is the portion of the beam between two nodes. Kinematic unknowns are those rotations and displacements that are not zero and must be computed. The support or end conditions of the beam will help answer the question.

Step 2: For each segment, generate the two governing equations. Check the end conditions to see whether one of the end rotations is zero or not (it is not possible for both the end rotations and other deflection components to be zero). If there are no element loads, the FEM term is zero. If there are one or more element loads, use the appropriate formula to compute the FEM for each element load and then sum all the FEMs. If one end of the segment displace relative to the other, compute the chord rotation; otherwise it is zero.

Step 3: For each kinematic unknown, generate an equilibrium condition using the free-body diagram. Step 4: Solve for all unknowns by combining all the equations from steps 2 and 3. Now the equations are entirely in terms of the kinematic unknowns. Step 5: Compute the support reactions with appropriate FBDs.

FEM TABLE

Problem 1 Draw the quantitative shear , bending moment diagram and qualitative deflection curve for the beam shown. EI is constant.
6 kN/m 10 kN

4m

4m

6m

6 kN/m 10 kN

4m

4m

6m

Problem 2 Draw the quantitative shear , bending moment diagram and qualitative deflection curve for the beam shown. Support B settles 10 mm, and EI is constant.
6 kN/m 10 kN

4m

4m 10 mm

6m

6 kN/m 10 kN

4m

4m 10 mm

6m

NO SIDEWAY

Determine the moment at B, then draw the moment diagram for each member of the frame. Assume the support at A and C are fixed and B is a fixed joint. EI is constant.

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