Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of symbols
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Generalised Hooke's law for an element of a shell
- 3 Cylindrical shells under symmetric loading
- 4 Purely ‘equilibrium’ solutions for shells: the membrane hypothesis
- 5 The geometry of curved surfaces
- 6 Geometry of distortion of curved surfaces
- 7 Displacements of elastic shells stressed according to the membrane hypothesis
- 8 Stretching and bending in cylindrical and nearly-cylindrical shells
- 9 Problems in the behaviour of cylindrical and nearly-cylindrical shells subjected to non-symmetric loading
- 10 Cylindrical shell roofs
- 11 Bending stresses in symmetrically-loaded shells of revolution
- 12 Flexibility of axisymmetric bellows under axial loading
- 13 Curved tubes and pipe-bends
- 14 Buckling of shells: classical analysis
- 15 Buckling of shells: non-classical analysis
- 16 The Brazier effect in the buckling of bent tubes
- 17 Vibration of cylindrical shells
- 18 Shell structures and the theory of plasticity
- Appendices
- Answers to selected problems
- References
- Index
3 - Cylindrical shells under symmetric loading
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of symbols
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Generalised Hooke's law for an element of a shell
- 3 Cylindrical shells under symmetric loading
- 4 Purely ‘equilibrium’ solutions for shells: the membrane hypothesis
- 5 The geometry of curved surfaces
- 6 Geometry of distortion of curved surfaces
- 7 Displacements of elastic shells stressed according to the membrane hypothesis
- 8 Stretching and bending in cylindrical and nearly-cylindrical shells
- 9 Problems in the behaviour of cylindrical and nearly-cylindrical shells subjected to non-symmetric loading
- 10 Cylindrical shell roofs
- 11 Bending stresses in symmetrically-loaded shells of revolution
- 12 Flexibility of axisymmetric bellows under axial loading
- 13 Curved tubes and pipe-bends
- 14 Buckling of shells: classical analysis
- 15 Buckling of shells: non-classical analysis
- 16 The Brazier effect in the buckling of bent tubes
- 17 Vibration of cylindrical shells
- 18 Shell structures and the theory of plasticity
- Appendices
- Answers to selected problems
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The subject of this chapter is the behaviour of thin elastic circular cylindrical shells when they are loaded by forces which are symmetrical about the axis of the cylinder. Cylindrical shells have structural applications in many fields of engineering, and the loading is often symmetrical, especially in pressure-vessel applications. Some of the results of this chapter will be directly useful and applicable in design. The behaviour of cylindrical shells when they are loaded by non-symmetric forces will be discussed later, particularly in chapters 8 and 9.
The main reason for the inclusion of the present topic early in the book is that it is uniquely instructive. Although it is obviously a particularly simple problem on account of the symmetry, it does nevertheless illustrate well some basic features of the behaviour of shell structures which reappear repeatedly, as we shall see, in much more complicated problems later in the book. In particular we shall be able to see clearly how the shell mobilises both stretching and bending effects in order to carry the applied loading. The problem will also illustrate how the choice of suitable dimensionless groups enables us to present useful results in the most economical way. Lastly we note that the symmetrically-loaded cylindrical shell provides a good introduction to the behaviour of symmetrically-loaded general shells of revolution, which will be discussed in chapter 11.
Our first problem (section 3.4) is the simplest of all: a semi-infinite shell which is loaded either by uniformly distributed radial shearing force or bending moment at its edge, as shown in fig. 3.1.
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- Theory of Shell Structures , pp. 40 - 79Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983
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