From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults

The assessment of the equilibrium and the safety of masonry vaults is of high relevance for the conservation and restoration of historical heritage. In the literature many approaches have been proposed for this tasks, starting from the 17th century. In this work we focus on the Membrane Equilibrium...

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Main Authors: Andrea Montanino, Carlo Olivieri, Giulio Zuccaro, Maurizio Angelillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/9/3846
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spelling doaj-2a51de5c3aa44779b1df237c4b0e27e82021-04-23T23:07:17ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-04-01113846384610.3390/app11093846From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross VaultsAndrea Montanino0Carlo Olivieri1Giulio Zuccaro2Maurizio Angelillo3Department of Structures for Engineering and Architecture, Università degli Studi di Napoli “Federico II”, Via Claudio 21, 80143 Napoli, ItalyDepartment of Civil Engineering, DICIV, Università degli Studi di Salerno, Via Giovanni Paolo II 132, 84084 Fisciano, ItalyDepartment of Structures for Engineering and Architecture, Università degli Studi di Napoli “Federico II”, Via Claudio 21, 80143 Napoli, ItalyDepartment of Civil Engineering, DICIV, Università degli Studi di Salerno, Via Giovanni Paolo II 132, 84084 Fisciano, ItalyThe assessment of the equilibrium and the safety of masonry vaults is of high relevance for the conservation and restoration of historical heritage. In the literature many approaches have been proposed for this tasks, starting from the 17th century. In this work we focus on the Membrane Equilibrium Analysis, developed under the Heyman’s theory of Limit Analysis. Within this theory, the equilibrium of a vault is assessed if it is possible to find at least one membrane surface, between the volume of the vaults, being in equilibrium under the given loads through a purely compressive stress field. The equilibrium of membranes is described by a second order partial differential equation, which is definitely elliptic only when a negative semidefinite stress is assigned, and the shape is the unknown of the problem. The proposed algorithm aims at finding membrane shapes, entirely comprised between the geometry of the vault, in equilibrium with admissible stress fields, through the minimization of an error function with respect to shape parameters of the stress potential, and then, with respect to the boundary values of the membrane shape. The application to two test cases shows the viability of this tool for the assessment of the equilibrium of existing masonry vaults.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/9/3846masonry vaultssafe theoremmembrane equilibrium analysisoptimization algorithmselliptic PDE
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Montanino
Carlo Olivieri
Giulio Zuccaro
Maurizio Angelillo
spellingShingle Andrea Montanino
Carlo Olivieri
Giulio Zuccaro
Maurizio Angelillo
From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
Applied Sciences
masonry vaults
safe theorem
membrane equilibrium analysis
optimization algorithms
elliptic PDE
author_facet Andrea Montanino
Carlo Olivieri
Giulio Zuccaro
Maurizio Angelillo
author_sort Andrea Montanino
title From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
title_short From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
title_full From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
title_fullStr From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
title_full_unstemmed From Stress to Shape: Equilibrium of Cloister and Cross Vaults
title_sort from stress to shape: equilibrium of cloister and cross vaults
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The assessment of the equilibrium and the safety of masonry vaults is of high relevance for the conservation and restoration of historical heritage. In the literature many approaches have been proposed for this tasks, starting from the 17th century. In this work we focus on the Membrane Equilibrium Analysis, developed under the Heyman’s theory of Limit Analysis. Within this theory, the equilibrium of a vault is assessed if it is possible to find at least one membrane surface, between the volume of the vaults, being in equilibrium under the given loads through a purely compressive stress field. The equilibrium of membranes is described by a second order partial differential equation, which is definitely elliptic only when a negative semidefinite stress is assigned, and the shape is the unknown of the problem. The proposed algorithm aims at finding membrane shapes, entirely comprised between the geometry of the vault, in equilibrium with admissible stress fields, through the minimization of an error function with respect to shape parameters of the stress potential, and then, with respect to the boundary values of the membrane shape. The application to two test cases shows the viability of this tool for the assessment of the equilibrium of existing masonry vaults.
topic masonry vaults
safe theorem
membrane equilibrium analysis
optimization algorithms
elliptic PDE
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/9/3846
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