The yield-line method for concrete slabs: automated at last

Author: Matthew Gilbert, Linwei He and Thomas Pritchard

Date published

1 October 2015

Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Institution of Structural Engineers The Institution of Structural Engineers
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The yield-line method for concrete slabs: automated at last

Tag
Author
Matthew Gilbert, Linwei He and Thomas Pritchard
Date published
1 October 2015
Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Structural Engineer
Author

Matthew Gilbert, Linwei He and Thomas Pritchard

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 93, Issue 10, 2015, Page(s) 44-48

Date published

1 October 2015

Author

Matthew Gilbert, Linwei He and Thomas Pritchard

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 93, Issue 10, 2015, Page(s) 44-48

Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

In this article, the discontinuity layout optimisation procedure, which has been used to automate the yield-line method, is briefly described and then applied to various example problems.

Synopsis

The yield-line method of analysis provides a powerful means of identifying the ultimate load-carrying capacity of reinforced concrete slabs. Benefits of the yield-line method are that it will often identify additional reserves of strength when applied to the analysis of existing slabs, and to highly economic slabs when used in design. Traditionally a hand-based method, the yield-line method is easy to apply to problems involving simple slab geometries and loading regimes. However, when these become more complex it can be difficult to identify the critical yield-line pattern.

To address this, the method has now been systematically automated. The automated method quickly identifies the critical mechanism (or a close approximation of this) and corresponding load-carrying capacity, providing engineers with a powerful new computer-based tool for the analysis and design of concrete slabs. In this article, the discontinuity layout optimisation (DLO) procedure which has been used to automate the yield-line method is briefly described and then applied to various example problems.

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Pages:
44-48
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

Tags

Concrete Technical Issue 10

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