Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics

In this paper, recent progress in graphic statics is combined with Williot displacement diagrams to create a graphical description of both statics and kinematics for two- and three-dimensional pin-jointed trusses. We begin with reciprocal form and force diagrams. The force diagram is dissected into...

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Main Authors: Allan McRobie, Marina Konstantatou, Georgios Athanasopoulos, Laura Hannigan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170202
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spelling doaj-8261891005734bae9bc4459ea74ed7052020-11-25T04:10:32ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014510.1098/rsos.170202170202Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographicsAllan McRobieMarina KonstantatouGeorgios AthanasopoulosLaura HanniganIn this paper, recent progress in graphic statics is combined with Williot displacement diagrams to create a graphical description of both statics and kinematics for two- and three-dimensional pin-jointed trusses. We begin with reciprocal form and force diagrams. The force diagram is dissected into its component cells which are then translated relative to each other. This defines a displacement diagram which is topologically equivalent to the form diagram (the structure). The various contributions to the overall Virtual Work appear as parallelograms (for two-dimensional trusses) or parallelopipeds (for three-dimensional trusses) that separate the force and the displacement pieces. Structural mechanisms can be identified by translating the force cells such that their shared faces slide across each other without separating. Elastic solutions can be obtained by choosing parallelograms or parallelopipeds of the appropriate aspect ratio. Finally, a new type of ‘elastographic’ diagram—termed a deformed Maxwell–Williot diagram (two-dimensional) or a deformed Rankine–Williot diagram (three-dimensional)—is presented which combines the deflected structure with the forces carried by its members.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170202maxwell reciprocal diagramsrankine reciprocal diagramswilliot diagramsgraphic staticskinematicsvirtual work
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allan McRobie
Marina Konstantatou
Georgios Athanasopoulos
Laura Hannigan
spellingShingle Allan McRobie
Marina Konstantatou
Georgios Athanasopoulos
Laura Hannigan
Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
Royal Society Open Science
maxwell reciprocal diagrams
rankine reciprocal diagrams
williot diagrams
graphic statics
kinematics
virtual work
author_facet Allan McRobie
Marina Konstantatou
Georgios Athanasopoulos
Laura Hannigan
author_sort Allan McRobie
title Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
title_short Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
title_full Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
title_fullStr Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
title_full_unstemmed Graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
title_sort graphic kinematics, visual virtual work and elastographics
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description In this paper, recent progress in graphic statics is combined with Williot displacement diagrams to create a graphical description of both statics and kinematics for two- and three-dimensional pin-jointed trusses. We begin with reciprocal form and force diagrams. The force diagram is dissected into its component cells which are then translated relative to each other. This defines a displacement diagram which is topologically equivalent to the form diagram (the structure). The various contributions to the overall Virtual Work appear as parallelograms (for two-dimensional trusses) or parallelopipeds (for three-dimensional trusses) that separate the force and the displacement pieces. Structural mechanisms can be identified by translating the force cells such that their shared faces slide across each other without separating. Elastic solutions can be obtained by choosing parallelograms or parallelopipeds of the appropriate aspect ratio. Finally, a new type of ‘elastographic’ diagram—termed a deformed Maxwell–Williot diagram (two-dimensional) or a deformed Rankine–Williot diagram (three-dimensional)—is presented which combines the deflected structure with the forces carried by its members.
topic maxwell reciprocal diagrams
rankine reciprocal diagrams
williot diagrams
graphic statics
kinematics
virtual work
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170202
work_keys_str_mv AT allanmcrobie graphickinematicsvisualvirtualworkandelastographics
AT marinakonstantatou graphickinematicsvisualvirtualworkandelastographics
AT georgiosathanasopoulos graphickinematicsvisualvirtualworkandelastographics
AT laurahannigan graphickinematicsvisualvirtualworkandelastographics
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