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A free-form gridshell roof

FROM:

R. Mesnil, “Stability of elastic grid shells”, Master’s Thesis, MIT Structural Design Laboratory, 2013

ABSTRACT: The elastic grid shell is a solution that combines double curvature and ease of mounting. This structural system, based on the deformation of an initially at grid without shear stiffness was invented more than fifty years ago. The apparition of new materials such as GFRP increased the potential of such structures whose properties depend on the deformation, or equivalently pre-stress of an initial structure. Elastic grid shells seem particularly promising as shelters, lightweight roofs, or kinetic structures. Although fundamental to the behavior of the strucure, the influence of the pre-stress on the stability of elastic grid shells has yet to be studied. Understanding this phenomenon could allow engineers to design more efficiently elastic grid shells. This thesis studies the influence of pre-stress on the stability of elastic grid shells. The research conducts a parametric study that focuses both a pre-buckled arch and initially at circular elastic grid shells with dierent grid spacing and levels of pre-stress. Realistic values of the parameters are determined from existing projects. The buckling analysis as well as the form-finding of the different structures are performed using finite element analysis. The tools are validated with comparison of the shape and buckling capacity of a pre-buckled arch with existing experiments. The parametric studies lead to recommendations aiming to facilitate the design of elastic grid shells.

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