4 resultados para Combined bending and shear
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
The operation of power systems in a Smart Grid (SG) context brings new opportunities to consumers as active players, in order to fully reach the SG advantages. In this context, concepts as smart homes or smart buildings are promising approaches to perform the optimization of the consumption, while reducing the electricity costs. This paper proposes an intelligent methodology to support the consumption optimization of an industrial consumer, which has a Combined Heat and Power (CHP) facility. A SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) system developed by the authors is used to support the implementation of the proposed methodology. An optimization algorithm implemented in the system in order to perform the determination of the optimal consumption and CHP levels in each instant, according to the Demand Response (DR) opportunities. The paper includes a case study with several scenarios of consumption and heat demand in the context of a DR event which specifies a maximum demand level for the consumer.
Resumo:
Adhesive bonding of components has become more efficient in recent years due to the developments in adhesive technology, which has resulted in higher peel and shear strengths, and also in allowable ductility up to failure. As a result, fastening and riveting methods are being progressively replaced by adhesive bonding, allowing a big step towards stronger and lighter unions. However, single-lap bonded joints still generate substantial peel and shear stress concentrations at the overlap edges that can be harmful to the structure, especially when using brittle adhesives that do not allow plasticization in these regions. In this work, a numerical and experimental study is performed to evaluate the feasibility of bending the adherends at the ends of the overlap for the strength improvement of single-lap aluminium joints bonded with a brittle and a ductile adhesive. Different combinations of joint eccentricity were tested, including absence of eccentricity, allowing the optimization of the joint. A Finite Element stress and failure analysis in ABAQUS® was also carried out to provide a better understanding of the bent configuration. Results showed a major advantage of using the proposed modification for the brittle adhesive, but the joints with the ductile adhesive were not much affected by the bending technique.
Resumo:
Bonded unions are gaining importance in many fields of manufacturing owing to a significant number of advantages to the traditional fastening, riveting, bolting and welding techniques. Between the available bonding configurations, the single-lap joint is the most commonly used and studied by the scientific community due to its simplicity, although it endures significant bending due to the non-collinear load path, which negatively affects its load bearing capabilities. The use of material or geometric changes in single-lap joints is widely documented in the literature to reduce this handicap, acting by reduction of peel and shear peak stresses at the damage initiation sites in structures or alterations of the failure mechanism emerging from local modifications. In this work, the effect of hole drilling at the overlap on the strength of single-lap joints was analyzed experimentally with two main purposes: (1) to check whether or not the anchorage effect of the adhesive within the holes is more preponderant than the stress concentrations near the holes, arising from the sharp edges, and modification of the joints straining behaviour (strength improvement or reduction, respectively) and (2) picturing a real scenario on which the components to be bonded are modified by some external factor (e.g. retrofitting of decaying/old-fashioned fastened unions). Tests were made with two adhesives (a brittle and a ductile one) varying the adherend thickness and the number, layout and diameter of the holes. Experimental testing showed that the joints strength never increases from the un-modified condition, showing a varying degree of weakening, depending on the selected adhesive and hole drilling configuration.
Resumo:
O presente trabalho pretende avaliar as diferenças de efeitos que os modelos de sobrecarga rodoviária de dez regulamentos (RSA, EC1-2, NBR, AASHTO, SATCC, CSA, IRC:6, SNiP, Manual de Hong Kong, NCP) provocam em pontes rodoviárias de pequeno a médio vão. Numa primeira parte são cobertas questões relacionadas com os efeitos dinâmicos em pontes referenciando-se diversos estudos. Em seguida são apresentados os principais fatores que influenciam os efeitos das sobrecargas rodoviárias. Os modelos de sobrecarga rodoviária, definidos nos diversos regulamentos, são descritos pormenorizadamente com o objetivo de clarificar e facilitar a sua aplicação. No que se refere à componente numérica do trabalho, a quantificação dos efeitos que cada modelo origina foi realizada através da modelação em elementos finitos de tabuleiros de comprimento variável entre 10 e 40 metros. Longitudinalmente analisaram-se os valores máximos do momento fletor e do esforço transverso, e numa análise transversal estudaram-se os valores máximos de momentos fletores positivos e negativos originados em cada tabuleiro. No capítulo 7 é realizada uma análise comparativa dos efeitos causados pelos modelos de sobrecarga rodoviária definidos em cada regulamento tomando como referência os valores obtidos pelo RSA.