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Determination of The Location of The Shear Center Through Use of The Sectorial Area Function

This document discusses determining the location of the shear center of a beam using the sectorial area function. It shows that for shear forces to produce only bending, the sectorial area function ω must satisfy two conditions: (1) the integral of ω multiplied by the y-coordinate of the beam's centroid over the beam's length must be 0, and (2) the integral of ω multiplied by the z-coordinate of the centroid must be 0. ω is defined as twice the area swept out by the radius from the shear center P to the beam's cross-section centerline.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
232 views

Determination of The Location of The Shear Center Through Use of The Sectorial Area Function

This document discusses determining the location of the shear center of a beam using the sectorial area function. It shows that for shear forces to produce only bending, the sectorial area function ω must satisfy two conditions: (1) the integral of ω multiplied by the y-coordinate of the beam's centroid over the beam's length must be 0, and (2) the integral of ω multiplied by the z-coordinate of the centroid must be 0. ω is defined as twice the area swept out by the radius from the shear center P to the beam's cross-section centerline.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Determination of the location of the shear center through use of the

sectorial area function

Vz
r⊥

ds P
P Vy

If the shear forces Vy and Vz act through the shear center, P, and hence
produce only bending of the beam, then the shear flow, q, that produces
those shear forces must not produce any moment about P, i.e.
L

∫ q r ds = 0
0

However, since q(0) =0, we have

q (s) =
(VI z yz − Vy I yy ) Qz + (Vy I yz − Vz I zz ) Qy
I yy I zz − I yz2
= Fz Qz + Fy Qy

where s A′ ( s )
Qz = ∫ ydA = y ( s ) A′ ( s )
A′( s )

Qy = ∫ zdA = z ( s ) A′ ( s ) q(s)
z (s)
A′( s ) C

so
L L y (s) C is the centroid
Fz ∫ r⊥Qz ds + Fy ∫ r⊥Qy ds = 0 of the entire
cross-section
0 0

y and z are measured


from C to the centroid of A'
L L
Fz ∫ r⊥Qz ds + Fy ∫ r⊥Qy ds = 0
0 0

Since this must be true for arbitrary Fz , Fy we must have

∫ r Q ds = 0
0
⊥ z

∫ r Q ds = 0
0
⊥ y

Consider L L

∫ r Q ds = ∫ r y ( s ) A′(s)ds = 0
0
⊥ z
0

Let d ω = r⊥ ds

Then r⊥ y ( s ) A′( s )ds = y ( s ) A′( s )dω = d ⎡⎣ y ( s ) A′( s )ω ⎤⎦ − ω d ⎡⎣ y ( s ) A′( s ) ⎤⎦


So we have
L L
− ∫ ω d [ yA′] = 0
s=L
∫ r Q ds = yA′ω
0
⊥ z s =0
0

But y ( L ) = 0, A′(0) = 0

so the first term on the right hand side of L

the above equation vanishes and we find ∫ ω d [ y A′] = 0


0

Since y A′ = ∫ y dA it follows that d [ y A′] = y dA and we obtain , finally


A′

∫ ω y dA = 0
0
L

In an entirely similar fashion from ∫ r Q ds = 0


0
⊥ y
we can show
L

∫ ω z dA = 0
0
Summary:

We have shown that in order for the shear forces to produce only bending,
we must have satisfied
L

∫ ω y dA = 0
0

∫ ω z dA = 0
0

ω is called the sectorial area function. We see it is given by


s
ω ( s ) = ∫ r⊥ ds + ω0
0

constant

To specify a value for the constant (which does not affect the above two
conditions), we can also require
L

∫ ω dA = 0
0
( this gives what is called the principal sectorial area function)
The principal sectorial area function satisfies

L L L

∫ ω y dA = 0
0
∫ ω z dA = 0
0
∫ ω dA = 0
0

Geometrical
interpretation of ω:
r⊥
ds P

area d Ω =
1
r⊥ ds so ω = 2Ω + ω0
2

Thus, the sectorial area function is just twice the area swept out by the
radius from P to the centerline of the cross-section (to within a constant).
Sign convention:

ω = + 2 |Ω|
ω = - 2 |Ω|



P P

sectorial area function coming from area swept out counterclockwise is


positive, coming from area swept out clockwise is negative

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