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 Postgraduate Course: Structural Form Function and Design Philosophy (European Masters) (PGEE10010)
Course Outline
| School | School of Engineering | College | College of Science and Engineering |  
| Course type | Standard | Availability | Not available to visiting students |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Postgraduate) | Credits | 12 |  
| Home subject area | Postgrad (School of Engineering) | Other subject area | None |  
| Course website | None | Taught in Gaelic? | No |  
| Course description | This course gives an introduction to the full discipline of structural design and analysis, identifying key ideas that are used in different courses within the complete degree programme, and putting them in proper relationship to one another.  It also covers many items that do not appear anywhere else in the degree programme but which are nonetheless critical to an overall understanding of structures and their design.  It deals with the functional role of different kinds of structure, the structural forms that are required to address these roles, the dominant factors in the behaviour of each kind of structure and the consequent simplifications that can be used to lead to an understanding of the behaviour.  It then deals with the philosophy of design, limit state concepts, ductility and stability and their implications for simplifications that are possible in design calculations.  It then deals with different classes of analysis of structures and the kinds of results that can be obtained from each, finishing with fundamental theorems of structural mechanics and their application to different classes of problem. |  
Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
| Pre-requisites |  | Co-requisites |  |  
| Prohibited Combinations |  | Other requirements | None |  
| Additional Costs | 0 |  
Course Delivery Information
|  |  
| Delivery period: 2013/14  Semester 1, Not available to visiting students (SS1) | Learn enabled:  Yes | Quota:  None |  |  Web Timetable | Web Timetable | | Course Start Date | 16/09/2013 |  
| Breakdown of Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) | Total Hours:
120
(
 Lecture Hours 20,
 Seminar/Tutorial Hours 9,
 Formative Assessment Hours 2,
 Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 2,
Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours
87 ) |  
| Additional Notes |  |  
| Breakdown of Assessment Methods (Further Info) | Written Exam
70 %,
Coursework
30 %,
Practical Exam
0 % |  
| Exam Information |  
    | Exam Diet | Paper Name | Hours & Minutes |  |  
| Main Exam Diet S1 (December) | Structural Form Function and Design Philosophy (European Masters) | 2:00 |  |  | Resit Exam Diet (August) |  | 2:00 |  |  
 
Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes 
| By the end of the course the student should be able to: 
 - describe different standard structural forms and explain the manner in which they can be used to deal with functional requirements;
 
 - describe the dominant load carrying processes in different structural systems, and the way in which these influence design concepts;
 
 - describe the kinds of simplified analysis that are appropriate to each structural system, explaining why each is appropriate, and defining the critical factors that dominate in controlling the strength of each system;
 
 - explain limit state analysis, its objectives, statistical basis and the role of safety factors;
 
 - explain the concept of ductility, identifying the difference between the ductility of a material and the ductility of structural behaviour, quoting examples where these differ from each other in one structure;
 
 - explain the concept of structural instability, including the difference between stability of an element and stability of a structural system;
 
 - describe linear and non-linear analyses that can be made of structures, their roles in design and the manner in which the results must be interpreted for safe design;
 
 - use the fundamental theorems of structural mechanics to solve simple problems in elasticity.
 |  
Assessment Information 
| Degree Exam: 100% |  
Special Arrangements 
| None |  
Additional Information 
| Academic description | Not entered |  
| Syllabus | 18 lectures, 9 tutorials, 
 LECTURES
 
 L1	Overview of structural analysis
 Introduction: key differences between determinate and redundant structures; methods of determining level of redundancy in trusses and frames.
 
 Section A: Introduction
 
 L1	Introduction: conceptual framework for civil engineering design and evaluation
 
 Section B: Limit state design concepts
 
 L2	Loads and actions on structures and their representation for design: statistical treatment of loads
 
 L3	Statistical treatment of strengths, and their relationship to loads
 Section C: Material behaviour and structures
 L4	Behaviour of materials and relationship to structural behaviour
 L5	Brittle and ductile behaviour in structures and in materials
 
 Section D: Limit states and the design of structures
 
 L6	Limit states and the design of structures: ultimate limit states
 L7	Limit states and the design of structures: ultimate and serviceability limit states
 
 Section E: Different structural behaviours and analysis
 
 L8	Structural analysis and its role
 
 Section F: Structural form and its key aspects
 
 L9	Simplifications used for understanding in design
 L10	Axial force and bending dominated structures
 L11	Curved line structures
 L12	Three dimensional structures
 
 Section G: Structural functions and structural form
 
 L13	Structural functions I
 L14	Structural functions II
 L15	Structural forms
 
 Section H: Fundamental theorems of structural analysis
 
 L16	Virtual Work
 L17	Strain Energy and the Total Potential
 L18	Summary and recapitulation
 
 TUTORIALS
 
 Tutorial 1	Simple Force Path Sketching
 Examining a photograph of a structure and determining the patterns of force transfer within it.
 
 Tutorial 2	Concepts for structural form;
 Simple structural problems to demonstrate the differences between structures in bending and truss action; 3D structural arrangements, arches
 
 Tutorial 3	Structural forms and loads
 Limit State Design concepts and comparisons between truss and frame structures.
 
 Tutorial 4	Limit states and loads on structures
 Different materials used in structures with series and parallel load paths and their effect on the ductility of the system.
 
 Tutorial 5	Ductility and brittleness
 Different materials used in structures with series and parallel load paths and their effect on the ductility of the system.
 
 LABS
 
 Experiment 1	Portal Frame
 A rectangular portal frame with pinned bases is tested.  One base has a slider to make the frame determinate, but forces can be applied to the slider to restore the support to its original position.  Superposition is used to explore the behaviour of a pinned base frame with one redundancy.
 
 Experiment 2	Two Pinned Arch
 An arch with pinned ends is tested.  One base has a slider to make the arch determinate, but forces can be applied to the slider to restore the support to its original position.  Superposition is used to explore the behaviour of a two-pinned arch.
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| Transferable skills | Not entered |  
| Reading list | Jennings, A. Structures: from theory to practice
 Spon Press (2004)
 
 Francis, A.J.
 Introducing Structures
 Pergamon  (1980)
 
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| Study Abroad | Not entered |  
| Study Pattern | Not entered |  
| Keywords | Stuctural Engineering |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Prof Michael Rotter Tel: (0131 6)50 5718
 Email: M.Rotter@ed.ac.uk
 | Course secretary | Ms Tina Mcavoy Tel: (0131 6)51 7080
 Email: Tina.McAvoy@ed.ac.uk
 |   |  © Copyright 2013 The University of Edinburgh -  13 January 2014 4:48 am |