This paper uses theorem of shakedown to assess the shakedown limit of elastic-plastic offshore structures. For this aim, an envelope of elastic response of the structure to cyclic loading cases is required. The shakedown limit is basically a valid collapse mechanism and can be quantified using yield
Limit load and shakedown analysis of plastic structures under stochastic uncertainty
β Scribed by K. Marti
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 281 KB
- Volume
- 198
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0045-7825
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Problems from plastic analysis are based on the convex, linear or linearised yield/strength condition and the linear equilibrium equation for the stress (state) vector. In practice one has to take into account stochastic variations of several model parameters. Hence, in order to get robust maximum load factors, the structural analysis problem with random parameters must be replaced by an appropriate deterministic substitute problem. A direct approach is proposed based on the primary costs for missing carrying capacity and the recourse costs (e.g. costs for repair, compensation for weakness within the structure, damage, failure, etc.). Based on the mechanical survival conditions of plasticity theory, a quadratic error/loss criterion is developed. The minimum recourse costs can be determined then by solving an optimisation problem having a quadratic objective function and linear constraints. For each vector aΓ°ΓΓ of model parameters and each design vector x, one obtains then an explicit representation of the ''best" internal load distribution F Γ . Moreover, also the expected recourse costs can be determined explicitly. Consequently, an explicit stochastic nonlinear program results for finding a robust maximal load factor l Γ .
The analytical properties and possible solution procedures are discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The response of a structure with random parameters (e.g. sti!ness, or damping coe$cients) is investigated, when it is subjected to a random load. The structural behaviour can be either linear or non-linear, but the forcing process has been assumed to be second-order Gaussian. A modi"ed series expans