47 resultados para Project of structures
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
In the last years many studies have been developed to analyze the seismic behavior throug the damage concept. In fact, the evaluation of the structural damage is important in order to quantify the safety of new and existing structures and, also, to establish a framework for seismic retrofitting decision making of structures. Most proposed models are based on a post-earthquake evaluation in such a way they uncouple the computation of the structural response from that of damage. However, there are other models which include explicity the existing coupling between the degradation and the structural mechanical beaviour. Those models are closer to the physical reality and its formulation is based on the principles of Continuum Damage Mechanics. In the present work, a coupled model is formulated using a simplified application of the Continuum Damage Mechanics to the analysis of frames and allows its representation in standard finite element programs. This work is part of the activities developed by the Structural Mechanics Department (UPM) within ICONS (European Research Project on Innovative Seismic Design Concepts for New and Existing Structures).
Resumo:
The use of seismic hysteretic dampers for passive control is increasing exponentially in recent years for both new and existing buildings. In order to utilize hysteretic dampers within a structural system, it is of paramount importance to have simplified design procedures based upon knowledge gained from theoretical studies and validated with experimental results. Non-linear Static Procedures (NSPs) are presented as an alternative to the force-based methods more common nowadays. The application of NSPs to conventional structures has been well established; yet there is a lack of experimental information on how NSPs apply to systems with hysteretic dampers. In this research, several shaking table tests were conducted on two single bay and single story 1:2 scale structures with and without hysteretic dampers. The maximum response of the structure with dampers in terms of lateral displacement and base shear obtained from the tests was compared with the prediction provided by three well-known NSPs: (1) the improved version of the Capacity Spectrum Method (CSM) from FEMA 440; (2) the improved version of the Displacement Coefficient Method (DCM) from FEMA 440; and (3) the N2 Method implemented in Eurocode 8. In general, the improved version of the DCM and N2 methods are found to provide acceptable accuracy in prediction, but the CSM tends to underestimate the response.
Resumo:
Numerous damage models have been developed in order to analyse the seismic behavior. Among the different possibilities existing in the literature, it is very clear that models developed along the lines of Continuum Damage Mechanics are more consistent with the definition of damage like a phenomenon with mechanical consequences as they include explicitly the coupling between damage and mechanical behavior. On the other hand, for seismic processes, phenomena such as low cycle fatigue may have a pronounced effect on the overall behavior of the frames and, therefore, its consideration turns out to be very important. However, many of existing models evaluate the damage only as a function of the maximum amplitude of cyclic deformation without considering the number of cycles. In this paper, a generalization of the simplified model proposed by Flórez is made in order to include the low cycle fatigue. Such model employs in its formulation irreversible thermodynamics and internal state variable theory.
Resumo:
La presente tesis doctoral aborda el estudio del proyecto de vivienda colectiva social desde la noción de norma, entendida desde la sistematización o normalización de los instrumentos del proyecto arquitectónico de vivienda protegida. Esto es, desde una idea de tipificación taxonómica en cuanto ajuste a un conjunto de reglas comunes productoras de sistemas normativos. La hipótesis de partida se basa en la consideración de la vivienda pública como un laboratorio de estudio histórico de los ideales de confort y calidad de vida. Este campo de pruebas ha constituido una sólida base que ha servido como punto de encuentro muy particular entre proyecto y normativa desde las primeras vanguardias europeas hasta la actualidad. El principal objetivo de la investigación es la revalorización de una normativa de vivienda que ha producido ejemplos de innegable calidad en el contexto nacional e internacional, así como un intento de actualización de su codificación. La investigación se sirve de los instrumentos específicos de la disciplina arquitectónica para explicar una disociación detectada desde la segunda mitad del siglo pasado entre la utopía del proyecto social de vivienda y el pragmatismo de la norma que lo regula, más allá de los aspectos sociales y culturales asociados a las nuevas composiciones familiares, las tecnologías cambiantes, los ritos domésticos contemporáneos o el valor creciente del tiempo libre. La propuesta de una nueva terminología que aborde nuevas relaciones en el acercamiento al proyecto de vivienda desde la normativa española deriva en un conjunto de estrategias de proyecto desde las que proponer sistemas normativos. Dichas estrategias se basan principalmente en mecanismos de cualificación espacial que permitan un nuevo acercamiento entre dichas normas y las formas de habitar actuales. ABSTRACT This doctoral thesis deals with the study of the project of social collective housing from the notion of rule, understanding it from the systematization or standardization of the instruments of architectural project for social housing. Thus, it deals with an idea of taxonomic typification as an adjustment to a set of common rules which produce regulation systems. The initial hypothesis is based on the consideration of public housing as a laboratory for studying the historical ideals of comfort and quality of life. This testing ground has been a solid base that has served as a very specific meeting point between project and regulations from the first European avant‐garde to nowadays. The main objective of this research is the revaluation of housing regulations, which have produced examples of undeniable quality in the national and international stage, as well as an attempt to update their codification. The research assumes the specific tools of the discipline of architecture for explaining a dissociation detected between the utopia of the project for social housing and the pragmatism of the regulations from the second half of last century, beyond social and cultural aspects associated to the new family arrangements, the changing technologies, the contemporary domestic rituals or the rising value of leisure time. The proposal of a new terminology that tackles new relations in the approach to housing project from the Spanish legislation results in a set of strategies to propose regulation systems. Those strategies are mainly based on mechanisms for spatial qualification which allow a new approach between these rules and the current ways of living.
Resumo:
Evolutionary algorithms are suitable to solve damage identification problems in a multiobjective context. However, the performance of these methods can deteriorate quickly with increasing noise intensities originating numerous uncertainties. In this work, a statistic structural damage detection method formulated in a multiobjective context is proposed, taking into account the uncertainties existing. The presented method is verified by a number of simulated damage scenarios. The effects of noise on damage detection are investigated.
Resumo:
The fundamental objective of this Ph. D. dissertation is to demonstrate that, under particular circumstances which cover most of the structures with practical interest, periodic structures can be understood and analyzed by means of closed waveguide theories and techniques. To that aim, in the first place a transversely periodic cylindrical structure is considered and the wave equation, under a combination of perfectly conducting and periodic boundary conditions, is studied. This theoretical study runs parallel to the classic analysis of perfectly conducting closed waveguides. Under the light shed by the aforementioned study it is clear that, under certain very common periodicity conditions, transversely periodic cylindrical structures share a lot of properties with closed waveguides. Particularly, they can be characterized by a complete set of TEM, TE and TM modes. As a result, this Ph. D. dissertation introduces the transversely periodic waveguide concept. Once the analogies between the modes of a transversely periodic waveguide and the ones of a closed waveguide have been established, a generalization of a well-known closed waveguide characterization method, the generalized Transverse Resonance Technique, is developed for the obtention of transversely periodic modes. At this point, all the necessary elements for the consideration of discontinuities between two different transversely periodic waveguides are at our disposal. The analysis of this type of discontinuities will be carried out by means of another well known closed waveguide method, the Mode Matching technique. This Ph. D. dissertation contains a sufficient number of examples, including the analysis of a wire-medium slab, a cross-shaped patches periodic surface and a parallel plate waveguide with a textured surface, that demonstrate that the Transverse Resonance Technique - Mode Matching hybrid is highly precise, efficient and versatile. Thus, the initial statement: ”periodic structures can be understood and analyzed by means of closed waveguide theories and techniques”, will be corroborated. Finally, this Ph. D. dissertation contains an adaptation of the aforementioned generalized Transverse Resonance Technique by means of which the analysis of laterally open periodic waveguides, such as the well known Substrate Integrated Waveguides, can be carried out without any approximation. The analysis of this type of structures has suscitated a lot of interest in the recent past and the previous analysis techniques proposed always resorted to some kind of fictitious wall to close the structure. vii Resumen El principal objetivo de esta tesis doctoral es demostrar que, bajo ciertas circunstancias que se cumplen para la gran mayoría de estructuras con interés práctico, las estructuras periódicas se pueden analizar y entender con conceptos y técnicas propias de las guías de onda cerradas. Para ello, en un primer lugar se considera una estructura cilíndrical transversalmente periódica y se estudia la ecuación de onda bajo una combinación de condiciones de contorno periódicas y de conductor perfecto. Este estudio teórico y de caracter general, sigue el análisis clásico de las guías de onda cerradas por conductor eléctrico perfecto. A la luz de los resultados queda claro que, bajo ciertas condiciones de periodicidad (muy comunes en la práctica) las estructuras cilíndricas transversalmente periódicas guardan multitud de analogías con las guías de onda cerradas. En particular, pueden ser descritas mediante un conjunto completo de modos TEM, TE y TM. Por ello, ésta tesis introduce el concepto de guía de onda transversalmente periódica. Una vez establecidas las similitudes entre las soluciones de la ecuación de onda, bajo una combinación de condiciones de contorno periódicas y de conductor perfecto, y los modos de guías de onda cerradas, se lleva a cabo, con éxito, la adaptación de un conocido método de caracterización de guías de onda cerradas, la técnica de la Resonancia Transversal Generalizada, para la obtención de los modos de guías transversalmente periódicas. En este punto, se tienen todos los elementos necesarios para considerar discontinuidades entre guías de onda transversalmente periódicas. El analisis de este tipo de discontinuidades se llevará a cabo mediante otro conocido método de análisis de estructuras cerradas, el Ajuste Modal. Esta tesis muestra multitud de ejemplos, como por ejemplo el análisis de un wire-medium slab, una superficie de parches con forma de cruz o una guía de placas paralelas donde una de dichas placas tiene cierta textura, en los que se demuestra que el método híbrido formado por la Resonancia Transversal Generalizada y el Ajuste Modal, es tremendamente preciso, eficiente y versátil y confirmará la validez de el enunciado inicial: ”las estructuras periódicas se pueden analizar y entender con conceptos y técnicas propias de las guías de onda cerradas” Para terminar, esta tésis doctoral incluye también una modificación de la técnica de la Resonancia Transversal Generalizada mediante la cual es posible abordar el análisis de estructuras periódica abiertas en los laterales, como por ejemplo las famosas guías de onda integradas en sustrato, sin ninguna aproximación. El análisis de este tipo de estructuras ha despertado mucho interés en los últimos años y las técnicas de análisis propuestas hasta ix el momento acostumbran a recurrir a algún tipo de pared ficticia para simular el carácter abierto de la estructura.
Resumo:
In Operational Modal Analysis of structures we often have multiple time history records of vibrations measured at different time instants. This work presents a procedure for estimating the modal parameters of the structure processing all the records, that is, using all available information to obtain a single estimate of the modal parameters. The method uses Maximum Likelihood Estimation and the Expectation Maximization algorithm. Finally, it has been applied to various problems for both simulated and real structures and the results show the advantage of the joint analysis proposed.
Resumo:
En muchas áreas de la ingeniería, la integridad y confiabilidad de las estructuras son aspectos de extrema importancia. Estos son controlados mediante el adecuado conocimiento de danos existentes. Típicamente, alcanzar el nivel de conocimiento necesario que permita caracterizar la integridad estructural implica el uso de técnicas de ensayos no destructivos. Estas técnicas son a menudo costosas y consumen mucho tiempo. En la actualidad, muchas industrias buscan incrementar la confiabilidad de las estructuras que emplean. Mediante el uso de técnicas de última tecnología es posible monitorizar las estructuras y en algunos casos, es factible detectar daños incipientes que pueden desencadenar en fallos catastróficos. Desafortunadamente, a medida que la complejidad de las estructuras, los componentes y sistemas incrementa, el riesgo de la aparición de daños y fallas también incrementa. Al mismo tiempo, la detección de dichas fallas y defectos se torna más compleja. En años recientes, la industria aeroespacial ha realizado grandes esfuerzos para integrar los sensores dentro de las estructuras, además de desarrollar algoritmos que permitan determinar la integridad estructural en tiempo real. Esta filosofía ha sido llamada “Structural Health Monitoring” (o “Monitorización de Salud Estructural” en español) y este tipo de estructuras han recibido el nombre de “Smart Structures” (o “Estructuras Inteligentes” en español). Este nuevo tipo de estructuras integran materiales, sensores, actuadores y algoritmos para detectar, cuantificar y localizar daños dentro de ellas mismas. Una novedosa metodología para detección de daños en estructuras se propone en este trabajo. La metodología está basada en mediciones de deformación y consiste en desarrollar técnicas de reconocimiento de patrones en el campo de deformaciones. Estas últimas, basadas en PCA (Análisis de Componentes Principales) y otras técnicas de reducción dimensional. Se propone el uso de Redes de difracción de Bragg y medidas distribuidas como sensores de deformación. La metodología se validó mediante pruebas a escala de laboratorio y pruebas a escala real con estructuras complejas. Los efectos de las condiciones de carga variables fueron estudiados y diversos experimentos fueron realizados para condiciones de carga estáticas y dinámicas, demostrando que la metodología es robusta ante condiciones de carga desconocidas. ABSTRACT In many engineering fields, the integrity and reliability of the structures are extremely important aspects. They are controlled by the adequate knowledge of existing damages. Typically, achieving the level of knowledge necessary to characterize the structural integrity involves the usage of nondestructive testing techniques. These are often expensive and time consuming. Nowadays, many industries look to increase the reliability of the structures used. By using leading edge techniques it is possible to monitoring these structures and in some cases, detect incipient damage that could trigger catastrophic failures. Unfortunately, as the complexity of the structures, components and systems increases, the risk of damages and failures also increases. At the same time, the detection of such failures and defects becomes more difficult. In recent years, the aerospace industry has done great efforts to integrate the sensors within the structures and, to develop algorithms for determining the structural integrity in real time. The ‘philosophy’ has being called “Structural Health Monitoring” and these structures have been called “smart structures”. These new types of structures integrate materials, sensors, actuators and algorithms to detect, quantify and locate damage within itself. A novel methodology for damage detection in structures is proposed. The methodology is based on strain measurements and consists in the development of strain field pattern recognition techniques. The aforementioned are based on PCA (Principal Component Analysis) and other dimensional reduction techniques. The use of fiber Bragg gratings and distributed sensing as strain sensors is proposed. The methodology have been validated by using laboratory scale tests and real scale tests with complex structures. The effects of the variable load conditions were studied and several experiments were performed for static and dynamic load conditions, demonstrating that the methodology is robust under unknown load conditions.
Resumo:
Is this a Mies?s project? Disappearances, or the art of being a Mies project Angel Borrego Several years ago I had to solve the structure of Mies House of the Werkbund exhibition of 1931 as an exercise for a course named Structures Projects in the School of Architecture of Madrid. We were offered this house as an exercise because there had been some complaints about having to calculate and deal with ?bad, real, anonymous? architecture widely recognized as such, in so far as it has been widely published, that furthermore had some ideal quality to it, a quality reinforced by the fact that it was not there anymore, one could not go and see it, old and deteriorated, all images we have of it are of a shiny new object: in fact its ideal quality was even present in that it had not even been designed to be a completely real house, as nobody ever lived there and wasn?t supposed to. It was a three dimensional representation of a house, what gave it a further flair of ideality. And it was as well the representation of an idea, and we all liked that. Last but not least, it had Mies to back it up, which promised us the remote possibility of analyzing one of his works in depth, with proper tools (this was a structures course, and we had already read, or heard, something about the importance of structures in Mies?s work.) We were lured by the possibility of reconstructing, if not the pavilion, some of the ideas leading to it. Ideas that were themselves structural, like the ?perfectly regular all columnar structure?, an ideal structure. We had a sensation that we could somehow reproduce the process and thoughts of Mies leading to the solution of a particular work, investigate him in a cuasi archaeological manner, reconstruct the project, as if being able to reconstruct one work we could reconstruct the entire Mies, and placing ourselves in his position replace him, which was to know for once where we were (1). All these thoughts, passed through our minds more or less abstractly, believe it or not, before we realized that we were supposed to imagine that the roof was also supported by the walls and that the plan was lacking two columns, which was short. We could not believe that only to make the exercise more difficult, as it was admitted, the professors would mutilate a Mies work in such a way. The exercise had lost all interest to us and there were some timid protests. The surprise came when, though admitting that the supporting walls had been their idea, the professors said they had not manipulated the plan of the house at all. Some confusion followed, since that seemed quite incredible to us, even more to professors I guess. Two of us went to the library and checkout two books, one being the ?History of Modern Architecture? (the Benevolo as it was known), from where they said to have copied the plan of the house for the exercise, and another book on Mies that included the same project. The Benevolo was actually lacking the two columns, but the other book included them, making clear our point. We were able to reorient the exercise and calculate the house just as Mies had designed it. We, the students I mean, were really happy, since we had a voice in the discipline of architecture: our own discipline since we were the ones being disciplined, and we had been allowed to freely talk our way through it. I had the nice sensation that what happened was curiously and rewardingly similar to, or a kind of metaphor for, the flowing space of the free plan, that was allowed to move through the perfectly regular structure, a most disciplined structure. As Mark Wigley has noted, discipline is intimately related to prothesis. The concept of prothesis (pro-thesis) would be already architectural as ?the act of placing before?, referring to a structure that has to be placed before anything else; it is already a structure, rather than being something added that could be removed..
Resumo:
La necesidad de desarrollar técnicas para predecir la respuesta vibroacústica de estructuras espaciales lia ido ganando importancia en los últimos años. Las técnicas numéricas existentes en la actualidad son capaces de predecir de forma fiable el comportamiento vibroacústico de sistemas con altas o bajas densidades modales. Sin embargo, ambos rangos no siempre solapan lo que hace que sea necesario el desarrollo de métodos específicos para este rango, conocido como densidad modal media. Es en este rango, conocido también como media frecuencia, donde se centra la presente Tesis doctoral, debido a la carencia de métodos específicos para el cálculo de la respuesta vibroacústica. Para las estructuras estudiadas en este trabajo, los mencionados rangos de baja y alta densidad modal se corresponden, en general, con los rangos de baja y alta frecuencia, respectivamente. Los métodos numéricos que permiten obtener la respuesta vibroacústica para estos rangos de frecuencia están bien especificados. Para el rango de baja frecuencia se emplean técnicas deterministas, como el método de los Elementos Finitos, mientras que, para el rango de alta frecuencia las técnicas estadísticas son más utilizadas, como el Análisis Estadístico de la Energía. En el rango de medias frecuencias ninguno de estos métodos numéricos puede ser usado con suficiente precisión y, como consecuencia -a falta de propuestas más específicas- se han desarrollado métodos híbridos que combinan el uso de métodos de baja y alta frecuencia, intentando que cada uno supla las deficiencias del otro en este rango medio. Este trabajo propone dos soluciones diferentes para resolver el problema de la media frecuencia. El primero de ellos, denominado SHFL (del inglés Subsystem based High Frequency Limit procedure), propone un procedimiento multihíbrido en el cuál cada subestructura del sistema completo se modela empleando una técnica numérica diferente, dependiendo del rango de frecuencias de estudio. Con este propósito se introduce el concepto de límite de alta frecuencia de una subestructura, que marca el límite a partir del cual dicha subestructura tiene una densidad modal lo suficientemente alta como para ser modelada utilizando Análisis Estadístico de la Energía. Si la frecuencia de análisis es menor que el límite de alta frecuencia de la subestructura, ésta se modela utilizando Elementos Finitos. Mediante este método, el rango de media frecuencia se puede definir de una forma precisa, estando comprendido entre el menor y el mayor de los límites de alta frecuencia de las subestructuras que componen el sistema completo. Los resultados obtenidos mediante la aplicación de este método evidencian una mejora en la continuidad de la respuesta vibroacústica, mostrando una transición suave entre los rangos de baja y alta frecuencia. El segundo método propuesto se denomina HS-CMS (del inglés Hybrid Substructuring method based on Component Mode Synthesis). Este método se basa en la clasificación de la base modal de las subestructuras en conjuntos de modos globales (que afectan a todo o a varias partes del sistema) o locales (que afectan a una única subestructura), utilizando un método de Síntesis Modal de Componentes. De este modo es posible situar espacialmente los modos del sistema completo y estudiar el comportamiento del mismo desde el punto de vista de las subestructuras. De nuevo se emplea el concepto de límite de alta frecuencia de una subestructura para realizar la clasificación global/local de los modos en la misma. Mediante dicha clasificación se derivan las ecuaciones globales del movimiento, gobernadas por los modos globales, y en las que la influencia del conjunto de modos locales se introduce mediante modificaciones en las mismas (en su matriz dinámica de rigidez y en el vector de fuerzas). Las ecuaciones locales se resuelven empleando Análisis Estadístico de Energías. Sin embargo, este último será un modelo híbrido, en el cual se introduce la potencia adicional aportada por la presencia de los modos globales. El método ha sido probado para el cálculo de la respuesta de estructuras sometidas tanto a cargas estructurales como acústicas. Ambos métodos han sido probados inicialmente en estructuras sencillas para establecer las bases e hipótesis de aplicación. Posteriormente, se han aplicado a estructuras espaciales, como satélites y reflectores de antenas, mostrando buenos resultados, como se concluye de la comparación de las simulaciones y los datos experimentales medidos en ensayos, tanto estructurales como acústicos. Este trabajo abre un amplio campo de investigación a partir del cual es posible obtener metodologías precisas y eficientes para reproducir el comportamiento vibroacústico de sistemas en el rango de la media frecuencia. ABSTRACT Over the last years an increasing need of novel prediction techniques for vibroacoustic analysis of space structures has arisen. Current numerical techniques arc able to predict with enough accuracy the vibro-acoustic behaviour of systems with low and high modal densities. However, space structures are, in general, very complex and they present a range of frequencies in which a mixed behaviour exist. In such cases, the full system is composed of some sub-structures which has low modal density, while others present high modal density. This frequency range is known as the mid-frequency range and to develop methods for accurately describe the vibro-acoustic response in this frequency range is the scope of this dissertation. For the structures under study, the aforementioned low and high modal densities correspond with the low and high frequency ranges, respectively. For the low frequency range, deterministic techniques as the Finite Element Method (FEM) are used while, for the high frequency range statistical techniques, as the Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA), arc considered as more appropriate. In the mid-frequency range, where a mixed vibro-acoustic behaviour is expected, any of these numerical method can not be used with enough confidence level. As a consequence, it is usual to obtain an undetermined gap between low and high frequencies in the vibro-acoustic response function. This dissertation proposes two different solutions to the mid-frequency range problem. The first one, named as The Subsystem based High Frequency Limit (SHFL) procedure, proposes a multi-hybrid procedure in which each sub-structure of the full system is modelled with the appropriate modelling technique, depending on the frequency of study. With this purpose, the concept of high frequency limit of a sub-structure is introduced, marking out the limit above which a substructure has enough modal density to be modelled by SEA. For a certain analysis frequency, if it is lower than the high frequency limit of the sub-structure, the sub-structure is modelled through FEM and, if the frequency of analysis is higher than the high frequency limit, the sub-structure is modelled by SEA. The procedure leads to a number of hybrid models required to cover the medium frequency range, which is defined as the frequency range between the lowest substructure high frequency limit and the highest one. Using this procedure, the mid-frequency range can be define specifically so that, as a consequence, an improvement in the continuity of the vibro-acoustic response function is achieved, closing the undetermined gap between the low and high frequency ranges. The second proposed mid-frequency solution is the Hybrid Sub-structuring method based on Component Mode Synthesis (HS-CMS). The method adopts a partition scheme based on classifying the system modal basis into global and local sets of modes. This classification is performed by using a Component Mode Synthesis, in particular a Craig-Bampton transformation, in order to express the system modal base into the modal bases associated with each sub-structure. Then, each sub-structure modal base is classified into global and local set, fist ones associated with the long wavelength motion and second ones with the short wavelength motion. The high frequency limit of each sub-structure is used as frequency frontier between both sets of modes. From this classification, the equations of motion associated with global modes are derived, which include the interaction of local modes by means of corrections in the dynamic stiffness matrix and the force vector of the global problem. The local equations of motion are solved through SEA, where again interactions with global modes arc included through the inclusion of an additional input power into the SEA model. The method has been tested for the calculation of the response function of structures subjected to structural and acoustic loads. Both methods have been firstly tested in simple structures to establish their basis and main characteristics. Methods are also verified in space structures, as satellites and antenna reflectors, providing good results as it is concluded from the comparison with experimental results obtained in both, acoustic and structural load tests. This dissertation opens a wide field of research through which further studies could be performed to obtain efficient and accurate methodologies to appropriately reproduce the vibro-acoustic behaviour of complex systems in the mid-frequency range.
Resumo:
Since the advent of the computer into the engineering field, the application of the numerical methods to the solution of engineering problems has grown very rapidly. Among the different computer methods of structural analysis the Finite Element (FEM) has been predominantly used. Shells and space structures are very attractive and have been constructed to solve a large variety of functional problems (roofs, industrial building, aqueducts, reservoirs, footings etc). In this type of structures aesthetics, structural efficiency and concept play a very important role. This class of structures can be divided into three main groups, namely continuous (concrete) shells, space frames and tension (fabric, pneumatic, cable etc )structures. In the following only the current applications of the FEM to the analysis of continuous shell structures will be discussed. However, some of the comments on this class of shells can be also applied to some extend to the others, but obviously specific computational problems will be restricted to the continuous shells. Different aspects, such as, the type of elements,input-output computational techniques etc, of the analysis of shells by the FEM will be described below. Clearly, the improvements and developments occurring in general for the FEM since its first appearance in the fifties have had a significative impact on the particular class of structures under discussion.
Resumo:
The design of shell and spatial structures represents an important challenge even with the use of the modern computer technology.If we concentrate in the concrete shell structures many problems must be faced,such as the conceptual and structural disposition, optimal shape design, analysis, construction methods, details etc. and all these problems are interconnected among them. As an example the shape optimization requires the use of several disciplines like structural analysis, sensitivity analysis, optimization strategies and geometrical design concepts. Similar comments can be applied to other space structures such as steel trusses with single or double shape and tension structures. In relation to the analysis the Finite Element Method appears to be the most extended and versatile technique used in the practice. In the application of this method several issues arise. First the derivation of the pertinent shell theory or alternatively the degenerated 3-D solid approach should be chosen. According to the previous election the suitable FE model has to be adopted i.e. the displacement,stress or mixed formulated element. The good behavior of the shell structures under dead loads that are carried out towards the supports by mainly compressive stresses is impaired by the high imperfection sensitivity usually exhibited by these structures. This last effect is important particularly if large deformation and material nonlinearities of the shell may interact unfavorably, as can be the case for thin reinforced shells. In this respect the study of the stability of the shell represents a compulsory step in the analysis. Therefore there are currently very active fields of research such as the different descriptions of consistent nonlinear shell models given by Simo, Fox and Rifai, Mantzenmiller and Buchter and Ramm among others, the consistent formulation of efficient tangent stiffness as the one presented by Ortiz and Schweizerhof and Wringgers, with application to concrete shells exhibiting creep behavior given by Scordelis and coworkers; and finally the development of numerical techniques needed to trace the nonlinear response of the structure. The objective of this paper is concentrated in the last research aspect i.e. in the presentation of a state-of-the-art on the existing solution techniques for nonlinear analysis of structures. In this presentation the following excellent reviews on this subject will be mainly used.
Resumo:
El objetivo de esta tesis es estudiar la dinámica de la capa logarítmica de flujos turbulentos de pared. En concreto, proponemos un nuevo modelo estructural utilizando diferentes tipos de estructuras coherentes: sweeps, eyecciones, grupos de vorticidad y streaks. La herramienta utilizada es la simulación numérica directa de canales turbulentos. Desde los primeros trabajos de Theodorsen (1952), las estructuras coherentes han jugado un papel fundamental para entender la organización y dinámica de los flujos turbulentos. A día de hoy, datos procedentes de simulaciones numéricas directas obtenidas en instantes no contiguos permiten estudiar las propiedades fundamentales de las estructuras coherentes tridimensionales desde un punto de vista estadístico. Sin embargo, la dinámica no puede ser entendida en detalle utilizando sólo instantes aislados en el tiempo, sino que es necesario seguir de forma continua las estructuras. Aunque existen algunos estudios sobre la evolución temporal de las estructuras más pequeñas a números de Reynolds moderados, por ejemplo Robinson (1991), todavía no se ha realizado un estudio completo a altos números de Reynolds y para todas las escalas presentes de la capa logarítmica. El objetivo de esta tesis es llevar a cabo dicho análisis. Los problemas más interesantes los encontramos en la región logarítmica, donde residen las cascadas de vorticidad, energía y momento. Existen varios modelos que intentan explicar la organización de los flujos turbulentos en dicha región. Uno de los más extendidos fue propuesto por Adrian et al. (2000) a través de observaciones experimentales y considerando como elemento fundamental paquetes de vórtices con forma de horquilla que actúan de forma cooperativa para generar rampas de bajo momento. Un modelo alternativo fué ideado por del Álamo & Jiménez (2006) utilizando datos numéricos. Basado también en grupos de vorticidad, planteaba un escenario mucho más desorganizado y con estructuras sin forma de horquilla. Aunque los dos modelos son cinemáticamente similares, no lo son desde el punto de vista dinámico, en concreto en lo que se refiere a la importancia que juega la pared en la creación y vida de las estructuras. Otro punto importante aún sin resolver se refiere al modelo de cascada turbulenta propuesto por Kolmogorov (1941b), y su relación con estructuras coherentes medibles en el flujo. Para dar respuesta a las preguntas anteriores, hemos desarrollado un nuevo método que permite seguir estructuras coherentes en el tiempo y lo hemos aplicado a simulaciones numéricas de canales turbulentos con números de Reynolds lo suficientemente altos como para tener un rango de escalas no trivial y con dominios computacionales lo suficientemente grandes como para representar de forma correcta la dinámica de la capa logarítmica. Nuestros esfuerzos se han desarrollado en cuatro pasos. En primer lugar, hemos realizado una campaña de simulaciones numéricas directas a diferentes números de Reynolds y tamaños de cajas para evaluar el efecto del dominio computacional en las estadísticas de primer orden y el espectro. A partir de los resultados obtenidos, hemos concluido que simulaciones con cajas de longitud 2vr y ancho vr veces la semi-altura del canal son lo suficientemente grandes para reproducir correctamente las interacciones entre estructuras coherentes de la capa logarítmica y el resto de escalas. Estas simulaciones son utilizadas como punto de partida en los siguientes análisis. En segundo lugar, las estructuras coherentes correspondientes a regiones con esfuerzos de Reynolds tangenciales intensos (Qs) en un canal turbulento han sido estudiadas extendiendo a tres dimensiones el análisis de cuadrantes, con especial énfasis en la capa logarítmica y la región exterior. Las estructuras coherentes han sido identificadas como regiones contiguas del espacio donde los esfuerzos de Reynolds tangenciales son más intensos que un cierto nivel. Los resultados muestran que los Qs separados de la pared están orientados de forma isótropa y su contribución neta al esfuerzo de Reynolds medio es nula. La mayor contribución la realiza una familia de estructuras de mayor tamaño y autosemejantes cuya parte inferior está muy cerca de la pared (ligada a la pared), con una geometría compleja y dimensión fractal « 2. Estas estructuras tienen una forma similar a una ‘esponja de placas’, en comparación con los grupos de vorticidad que tienen forma de ‘esponja de cuerdas’. Aunque el número de objetos decae al alejarnos de la pared, la fracción de esfuerzos de Reynolds que contienen es independiente de su altura, y gran parte reside en unas pocas estructuras que se extienden más allá del centro del canal, como en las grandes estructuras propuestas por otros autores. Las estructuras dominantes en la capa logarítmica son parejas de sweeps y eyecciones uno al lado del otro y con grupos de vorticidad asociados que comparten las dimensiones y esfuerzos con los remolinos ligados a la pared propuestos por Townsend. En tercer lugar, hemos estudiado la evolución temporal de Qs y grupos de vorticidad usando las simulaciones numéricas directas presentadas anteriormente hasta números de Reynolds ReT = 4200 (Reynolds de fricción). Las estructuras fueron identificadas siguiendo el proceso descrito en el párrafo anterior y después seguidas en el tiempo. A través de la interseción geométrica de estructuras pertenecientes a instantes de tiempo contiguos, hemos creado gratos de conexiones temporales entre todos los objetos y, a partir de ahí, definido ramas primarias y secundarias, de tal forma que cada rama representa la evolución temporal de una estructura coherente. Una vez que las evoluciones están adecuadamente organizadas, proporcionan toda la información necesaria para caracterizar la historia de las estructuras desde su nacimiento hasta su muerte. Los resultados muestran que las estructuras nacen a todas las distancias de la pared, pero con mayor probabilidad cerca de ella, donde la cortadura es más intensa. La mayoría mantienen tamaños pequeños y no viven mucho tiempo, sin embargo, existe una familia de estructuras que crecen lo suficiente como para ligarse a la pared y extenderse a lo largo de la capa logarítmica convirtiéndose en las estructuras observas anteriormente y descritas por Townsend. Estas estructuras son geométricamente autosemejantes con tiempos de vida proporcionales a su tamaño. La mayoría alcanzan tamaños por encima de la escala de Corrsin, y por ello, su dinámica está controlada por la cortadura media. Los resultados también muestran que las eyecciones se alejan de la pared con velocidad media uT (velocidad de fricción) y su base se liga a la pared muy rápidamente al inicio de sus vidas. Por el contrario, los sweeps se mueven hacia la pared con velocidad -uT y se ligan a ella más tarde. En ambos casos, los objetos permanecen ligados a la pared durante 2/3 de sus vidas. En la dirección de la corriente, las estructuras se desplazan a velocidades cercanas a la convección media del flujo y son deformadas por la cortadura. Finalmente, hemos interpretado la cascada turbulenta, no sólo como una forma conceptual de organizar el flujo, sino como un proceso físico en el cual las estructuras coherentes se unen y se rompen. El volumen de una estructura cambia de forma suave, cuando no se une ni rompe, o lo hace de forma repentina en caso contrario. Los procesos de unión y rotura pueden entenderse como una cascada directa (roturas) o inversa (uniones), siguiendo el concepto de cascada de remolinos ideado por Richardson (1920) y Obukhov (1941). El análisis de los datos muestra que las estructuras con tamaños menores a 30η (unidades de Kolmogorov) nunca se unen ni rompen, es decir, no experimentan el proceso de cascada. Por el contrario, aquellas mayores a 100η siempre se rompen o unen al menos una vez en su vida. En estos casos, el volumen total ganado y perdido es una fracción importante del volumen medio de la estructura implicada, con una tendencia ligeramente mayor a romperse (cascada directa) que a unirse (cascade inversa). La mayor parte de interacciones entre ramas se debe a roturas o uniones de fragmentos muy pequeños en la escala de Kolmogorov con estructuras más grandes, aunque el efecto de fragmentos de mayor tamaño no es despreciable. También hemos encontrado que las roturas tienen a ocurrir al final de la vida de la estructura y las uniones al principio. Aunque los resultados para la cascada directa e inversa no son idénticos, son muy simétricos, lo que sugiere un alto grado de reversibilidad en el proceso de cascada. ABSTRACT The purpose of the present thesis is to study the dynamics of the logarithmic layer of wall-bounded turbulent flows. Specifically, to propose a new structural model based on four different coherent structures: sweeps, ejections, clusters of vortices and velocity streaks. The tool used is the direct numerical simulation of time-resolved turbulent channels. Since the first work by Theodorsen (1952), coherent structures have played an important role in the understanding of turbulence organization and its dynamics. Nowadays, data from individual snapshots of direct numerical simulations allow to study the threedimensional statistical properties of those objects, but their dynamics can only be fully understood by tracking them in time. Although the temporal evolution has already been studied for small structures at moderate Reynolds numbers, e.g., Robinson (1991), a temporal analysis of three-dimensional structures spanning from the smallest to the largest scales across the logarithmic layer has yet to be performed and is the goal of the present thesis. The most interesting problems lie in the logarithmic region, which is the seat of cascades of vorticity, energy, and momentum. Different models involving coherent structures have been proposed to represent the organization of wall-bounded turbulent flows in the logarithmic layer. One of the most extended ones was conceived by Adrian et al. (2000) and built on packets of hairpins that grow from the wall and work cooperatively to gen- ´ erate low-momentum ramps. A different view was presented by del Alamo & Jim´enez (2006), who extracted coherent vortical structures from DNSs and proposed a less organized scenario. Although the two models are kinematically fairly similar, they have important dynamical differences, mostly regarding the relevance of the wall. Another open question is whether such a model can be used to explain the cascade process proposed by Kolmogorov (1941b) in terms of coherent structures. The challenge would be to identify coherent structures undergoing a turbulent cascade that can be quantified. To gain a better insight into the previous questions, we have developed a novel method to track coherent structures in time, and used it to characterize the temporal evolutions of eddies in turbulent channels with Reynolds numbers high enough to include a non-trivial range of length scales, and computational domains sufficiently long and wide to reproduce correctly the dynamics of the logarithmic layer. Our efforts have followed four steps. First, we have conducted a campaign of direct numerical simulations of turbulent channels at different Reynolds numbers and box sizes, and assessed the effect of the computational domain in the one-point statistics and spectra. From the results, we have concluded that computational domains with streamwise and spanwise sizes 2vr and vr times the half-height of the channel, respectively, are large enough to accurately capture the dynamical interactions between structures in the logarithmic layer and the rest of the scales. These simulations are used in the subsequent chapters. Second, the three-dimensional structures of intense tangential Reynolds stress in plane turbulent channels (Qs) have been studied by extending the classical quadrant analysis to three dimensions, with emphasis on the logarithmic and outer layers. The eddies are identified as connected regions of intense tangential Reynolds stress. Qs are then classified according to their streamwise and wall-normal fluctuating velocities as inward interactions, outward interactions, sweeps and ejections. It is found that wall-detached Qs are isotropically oriented background stress fluctuations, common to most turbulent flows, and do not contribute to the mean stress. Most of the stress is carried by a selfsimilar family of larger wall-attached Qs, increasingly complex away from the wall, with fractal dimensions « 2. They have shapes similar to ‘sponges of flakes’, while vortex clusters resemble ‘sponges of strings’. Although their number decays away from the wall, the fraction of the stress that they carry is independent of their heights, and a substantial part resides in a few objects extending beyond the centerline, reminiscent of the very large scale motions of several authors. The predominant logarithmic-layer structures are sideby- side pairs of sweeps and ejections, with an associated vortex cluster, and dimensions and stresses similar to Townsend’s conjectured wall-attached eddies. Third, the temporal evolution of Qs and vortex clusters are studied using time-resolved DNS data up to ReT = 4200 (friction Reynolds number). The eddies are identified following the procedure presented above, and then tracked in time. From the geometric intersection of structures in consecutive fields, we have built temporal connection graphs of all the objects, and defined main and secondary branches in a way that each branch represents the temporal evolution of one coherent structure. Once these evolutions are properly organized, they provide the necessary information to characterize eddies from birth to death. The results show that the eddies are born at all distances from the wall, although with higher probability near it, where the shear is strongest. Most of them stay small and do not last for long times. However, there is a family of eddies that become large enough to attach to the wall while they reach into the logarithmic layer, and become the wall-attached structures previously observed in instantaneous flow fields. They are geometrically self-similar, with sizes and lifetimes proportional to their distance from the wall. Most of them achieve lengths well above the Corrsin’ scale, and hence, their dynamics are controlled by the mean shear. Eddies associated with ejections move away from the wall with an average velocity uT (friction velocity), and their base attaches very fast at the beginning of their lives. Conversely, sweeps move towards the wall at -uT, and attach later. In both cases, they remain attached for 2/3 of their lives. In the streamwise direction, eddies are advected and deformed by the local mean velocity. Finally, we interpret the turbulent cascade not only as a way to conceptualize the flow, but as an actual physical process in which coherent structures merge and split. The volume of an eddy can change either smoothly, when they are not merging or splitting, or through sudden changes. The processes of merging and splitting can be thought of as a direct (when splitting) or an inverse (when merging) cascade, following the ideas envisioned by Richardson (1920) and Obukhov (1941). It is observed that there is a minimum length of 30η (Kolmogorov units) above which mergers and splits begin to be important. Moreover, all eddies above 100η split and merge at least once in their lives. In those cases, the total volume gained and lost is a substantial fraction of the average volume of the structure involved, with slightly more splits (direct cascade) than mergers. Most branch interactions are found to be the shedding or absorption of Kolmogorov-scale fragments by larger structures, but more balanced splits or mergers spanning a wide range of scales are also found to be important. The results show that splits are more probable at the end of the life of the eddy, while mergers take place at the beginning of the life. Although the results for the direct and the inverse cascades are not identical, they are found to be very symmetric, which suggests a high degree of reversibility of the cascade process.
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The European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) is the credit system for higher education used in the European Higher Education Area (EHEA), which involves all the countries engaged in the Bologna Process. This paper describes a study which is part of the project of the Bologna Experts Team-Spain and was carried out with the following aims: 1) designing some procedures for the assessment of transferable competences; and 2) testing some basic psychometric features that an assessment device with some consequences for the subjects being evaluated needs to prove. We will focus on the degrees of Computing. The sample of students (20) includes first year students from the Technical University of Madrid. In this paper, we will report some results of data analyses carried out to this moment on reliability and validity of the task designed to measure problem solving.
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La Guadua (Guadua angustifolia Kunth) es una de las especies forestales más características de Colombia. Perteneciente a la familia del bambú, ésta planta nativa de Colombia usada en la construcción permite una reducción de costos, garantizados, entre otras ventajas, por sus propiedades físico-mecánicas de flexibilidad, resistencia, dureza, efecto climatizado y sismo resistencia. En el proyecto se plantea inicialmente un estudio de la Guadua como material estructural. Se estudiará su anatomía, sus propiedades físicas y mecánicas así como la normativa existente que rige su uso en construcción y por último se darán algunos ejemplos en los que se puede comprobar su uso en la actualidad. Posteriormente se procederá al desarrollo del proyecto cuya finalidad es el diseño de una estructura modular multifuncional que se necesita para llevarla a cabo en un proyecto de cooperación localizado en Neiva (Colombia). El proyecto incluirá todos los documentos necesarios para un trabajo de estas características: memoria, pliego de condiciones técnicas, presupuesto, planos, así como el Estudio de Seguridad y Salud Laboral. Como solución a las necesidades planteadas en el proyecto de cooperación, se realizará el diseño de dos estructuras modulares cuya finalidad sea las de uso como oficina y como almacén. Se aplicará para su cálculo el CTE cómo normativa de construcción, pero apoyándose en algunos parámetros en la NSR-10, estableciendo una comparativa posterior entre ambas normativas. Debido a la importancia de la acción sísmica en Colombia se comprobará la resistencia sísmica del módulo diseñado según el “Manual de Construcción, evaluación y rehabilitación sismo resistente de viviendas de mampostería” creado por la Asociación Colombiana de Ingeniería Sísmica. Basándose en este manual se definirán los tipos de uniones más favorables sísmicamente de los módulos con el diseño de una cercha auxiliar necesaria según el tipo de unión. ABSTRACT PROJECT: Structural applications of the guadua (Guadua angustifolia Kunth). Project of modular multifunctional structure in Colombia Guadua (Guadua angustifolia Kunth) is one of the forest species more characteristics of Colombia. Pertaining to the family of the bamboo, this one native plant of Colombia used in the construction allows a reduction of costs, guaranteed, among others advantages, by its physic mechanical properties of flexibility, resistance, hardness, climatic effect and earthquake resistance. The project initially considers a study of the Guadua as structural material. We will study its anatomy, its physical and mechanical properties as well as the existing norm that governs its use in construction and finally some examples will be provided in which its actual use can be verified. Later on, we will proceed with the development of the project which purpose is the design of a multifunctional modular structure required to in a project of cooperation located in Neiva (Colombia). The project will include all the necessary documents for a work of these characteristics: memory, technical specifications, budget, drawings, as well as the Security and Labor Health Study. In order to satisfy the needs raised in the cooperation project, we will undertake the design of two modular structures with the purpose to be used as office and warehouse. The construction normative CTE will be applied for its calculation, but some parameters will be based in the NSR-10, establishing a comparison between both norms. Due to the importance of the seismic action in Colombia, the seismic resistance of the module will be verified according to the “Manual of Construction, evaluation and rehabilitation resistant earthquake of rubblework houses” created by the Colombian Association of Seismic Engineering,. We will also use this Manual to define the types of unions more favorable from seismic point of view, designing the required auxiliary segments according to the type of union.