Boundary conditions of a bending plate

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on determining the boundary conditions for a bending plate supported at x = L/2 and x = -L/2, which deforms under its own weight. The maximum displacement occurs at x = 0, with both ends of the plate being free boundaries. The proposed boundary conditions for the right end of the plate at x = L include zero shear force and zero bending moment. Clarification is provided regarding whether "ends" refers to the full plate or the half-space, confirming that the conditions apply to both ends of the full plate. Ultimately, the correct boundary conditions are established as zero shear force and zero bending moment at both ends.
kosovo dave
Gold Member
Messages
34
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


I'm trying to find the boundary conditions for the following problem:

A plate with length 2L is placed on supports at x = L/2 and x = - L/2. The plate is deforming elastically under its own weight (maximum displacement bowing up at x = 0). Both ends of the plate are free boundaries.

The goal is to eventually solve the equation DW'''' = q(x) for the right half of the plate (x > 0).

Homework Equations


D is the flexural rigidity $$\frac{Eh^3}{12(1-\nu^2)}$$

E is Young's Modulus, ν is Poisson's ratio, h is the thickness of the plate, and q = -ρgh.

The Attempt at a Solution


Since the right end of the plate is free, I think the two boundary conditions there are DW''' = 0 (shear force) at x = L and DW'' = 0 (bending moment) at x = L. What are the quantities I should be considering for the boundary conditions at x = 0? I feel like one of them is bending stress.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
The bending moments and the displacements are zero at both ends. The reaction forces and shear forces are not.
 
  • Like
Likes kosovo dave
By "ends" do you mean of the full plate (x = -L and x = L) or the half-space (x=0 and x = L)? I should also clarify that the ends of the plate (x = +/- L) sag beneath the x-axis.
 
Screen Shot 2017-12-09 at 7.26.12 PM.png
 

Attachments

  • Screen Shot 2017-12-09 at 7.26.12 PM.png
    Screen Shot 2017-12-09 at 7.26.12 PM.png
    42.2 KB · Views: 900
kosovo dave said:
Oh. I missed this when I was visualizing the system. Yes, the boundary conditions you proposed are the correct ones to use: zero shear force and zero bending moment at both ends.
 
Thread 'Help with Time-Independent Perturbation Theory "Good" States Proof'
(Disclaimer: this is not a HW question. I am self-studying, and this felt like the type of question I've seen in this forum. If there is somewhere better for me to share this doubt, please let me know and I'll transfer it right away.) I am currently reviewing Chapter 7 of Introduction to QM by Griffiths. I have been stuck for an hour or so trying to understand the last paragraph of this proof (pls check the attached file). It claims that we can express Ψ_{γ}(0) as a linear combination of...

Similar threads

Back
Top