Wood method

Method in structural analysis of buckling From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Wood method, also known as the Merchant–Rankine–Wood method, is a structural analysis method which was developed to determine estimates for the effective buckling length of a compressed member included in a building frames, both in sway and a non-sway buckling modes.[1][2] It is named after R. H. Wood.

According to this method, the ratio between the critical buckling length and the real length of a column is determined based on two redistribution coefficients, and , which are mapped to a ratio between the effective buckling length of a compressed member and its real length.

The redistribution coefficients are obtained through the following expressions:

where are the stiffness coefficients for the adjacent length of columns.

Although this method was included in ENV 1993-1-1:1992, it is absent from EN 1993-1-1.

See also

  • EN 1993
  • Merchant–Rankine method
  • Horne method

References

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