Friends
I am analysing a steel silo made of roof, barrel, bottom hopper and columns and braces. The roof, barrel, and bottom hopper are all unstiffened plates. See attached diagram.
I have used thin shell elements and can get output contours of Nx Ny Nxy Princepal stress etc which will tell me the magnitude of membrane stresses in the plate. Obviously I will keep these values below the yield stress of the material. But I have been told that you get a problem of 'shear buckling' in the lower regions of the barrel near the column supports.
I am wondering how to check the section for shear buckling. The barrel is 160 inches tall, 120 inches dia. Supposing I know the magnitude of principal compression in the lower region, what cross-section area is to resist that?
Any of your thoughts will be appreciated.
Normm
I am analysing a steel silo made of roof, barrel, bottom hopper and columns and braces. The roof, barrel, and bottom hopper are all unstiffened plates. See attached diagram.
I have used thin shell elements and can get output contours of Nx Ny Nxy Princepal stress etc which will tell me the magnitude of membrane stresses in the plate. Obviously I will keep these values below the yield stress of the material. But I have been told that you get a problem of 'shear buckling' in the lower regions of the barrel near the column supports.
I am wondering how to check the section for shear buckling. The barrel is 160 inches tall, 120 inches dia. Supposing I know the magnitude of principal compression in the lower region, what cross-section area is to resist that?
Any of your thoughts will be appreciated.
Normm