XI, 506 p. 680 illus., 663 illus. in color., online resource.
Electronic
The statics and mechanics of structures form a core aspect of civil engineering. This book provides an introduction to the subject, starting from classic hand-calculation types of analysis and gradually advancing to a systematic form suitable for computer implementation. It starts with statically determinate structures in the form of trusses, beams and frames. Instability is discussed in the form of the column problem - both the ideal column and the imperfect column used in actual column design. The theory of statically indeterminate structures is then introduced, and the force and deformation methods are explained and illustrated. An important aspect of the book's approach is the systematic development of the theory in a form suitable for computer implementation using finite elements. This development is supported by two small computer programs, MiniTruss and MiniFrame, which permit static analysis of trusses and frames, as well as linearized stability analysis. The book's final section presents related strength of materials subjects in greater detail; these include stress and strain, failure criteria, and normal and shear stresses in general beam flexure and in beam torsion. The book is well-suited as a textbook for a two-semester introductory course on structures.
Preface -- 1 Equilibrium andReactions -- 2Truss Structures -- 3Statics of Beams and Frames -- 4Deformation of Beams and Frames -- 5 Column Stability -- 6The Force Method -- 7 Deformation and Element Methods for Frames -- 8Stresses and Strains -- 9Material Behavior -- 10 General Bending of Beams -- 11 Flexure and Torsion of Beams -- References -- Index.