CANPRO
Structural
- Nov 4, 2010
- 1,110
I'm looking for a little guidance on how to analyze this situation.
This will be applied to a job eventually, but for now I'm just trying to get the concept right.
For discussion sake I'll add some dimensions...
I have a 10' steel beam, 8' of the beam sits flat on a slab (I assume the slab is perfectly rigid) and is not fastened to the slab in any way, and there is a 2' cantilever. At the end of the canitlever is a concentrated moment. The cantilever supports gravity loads. The concentrated moment is applied so that the tip of the beam deflections upward. (see attached sketch)
I can picture how the beam will deflect...not all 8' of the beam will remain in contact with the slab, the remaining area of the beam in contact with the slab will resist the vertical load and the concentrated moment.
I would like to know how much of the beam remains in contact with the slab and what the pressure distribution will look like.
My approach right now is...
Take the vertical load, this is the resulant of the pressure between the beam and the slab.
Sum the moments at the far left of the beam (the end that is on the slab) and use this to get the location of my resultant.
And from there I'm guessing I have a triangular pressure distribution...
I'm just not sure if this is the right way to go. Does this sound about right?
This will be applied to a job eventually, but for now I'm just trying to get the concept right.
For discussion sake I'll add some dimensions...
I have a 10' steel beam, 8' of the beam sits flat on a slab (I assume the slab is perfectly rigid) and is not fastened to the slab in any way, and there is a 2' cantilever. At the end of the canitlever is a concentrated moment. The cantilever supports gravity loads. The concentrated moment is applied so that the tip of the beam deflections upward. (see attached sketch)
I can picture how the beam will deflect...not all 8' of the beam will remain in contact with the slab, the remaining area of the beam in contact with the slab will resist the vertical load and the concentrated moment.
I would like to know how much of the beam remains in contact with the slab and what the pressure distribution will look like.
My approach right now is...
Take the vertical load, this is the resulant of the pressure between the beam and the slab.
Sum the moments at the far left of the beam (the end that is on the slab) and use this to get the location of my resultant.
And from there I'm guessing I have a triangular pressure distribution...
I'm just not sure if this is the right way to go. Does this sound about right?