Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices

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Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices
Walter D. Pilkey
Wiley | ISBN: 0471032212 | 2004-11-11 | PDF (OCR) | 1536 pages | 12.10 Mb

A single-source reference covering all aspects of formulas for stress and strain Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices, Second Edition presents and classifies data related to all the applications of stress and strain analysis in a handy and useful single-source reference. Delivering key material not found in other books on the subject, this updated edition enables readers to harness the efficiency and accuracy of today's computers for deformation and stress analysis. This versatile Second Edition provides the critical information needed to identify the responses of general mechanical elements and structural members, as well as to find simple formulas that are organized by member type to facilitate the solution of more complex members. Formulas are given for stresses, displacements, buckling loads, natural frequencies, transient responses, beams, torsional systems, extension bars, frames, thin-walled beams, curved bars, rotors, plates, thick shells, and thin shells. The tables of structural matrices are powerful tools for developing custom computer programs to solve special problems. Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices, Second Edition features: New material on biomechanics, biomaterials, viscoelasticity, nanotechnology, MEMS, and material selection Extensive geometries or load cases for different structural members Stiffness matrices enable readers to quickly and easily construct their own computer solutions Formulas for dynamic response and free vibration Background material on stress and strain, mechanical properties of materials, stress analysis, stress concentration, and fracture and fatigue mechanics A conveniently organized resource for the strength of material formulas, Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices, Second Edition eases the task of analysis and provides critical information for mechanical, design, civil, and structural engineers as well as stress analysts.

Summary: This is a great reference book.
Rating: 5
This work is very extensive. Its a highly practical reference for the working engineer (mechanical, civil, aerospace) or student. If you're interested in the behavior of beams, plates, grillages, shells, shafts, gears, columns, joints, frames, etc. under constant or variable loads, I highly recommend it. It covers so many geometries and conditions, you will surely find good use for it. Plus, the advanced material is a great aid in deriving your own results for unusual geometries.
This book ranks up there with Roark's Formulas for Stress & Strain by Warren C. Young or Stresses in Plates and Shells by Ansel C. Ugural.
If you want to take advantage of the more advanced detailed coverage of transfer matrices and tabulated results, I also recommend you also buy Modern Formulas for statics and Dynamics, a Stress-and-Strain Approach, Walter D. Pilkey and Pin Yu Chang, 1978, which gives lots of worked examples. But this is not required to use most of the ready-made stress/strain formulations.

Summary: Roark's book raised to the power 3!
Rating: 5
This is a first-class reference book, very well organized. As a practising structural engineer, I'm commonly confronted with strength of materials formulas for different kind of structural members and I do extensive FE modeling. It is interesting to have analytical formulas to check these calculations on some occasions.Roark's formulas for stress and strain hadn't satisfied me: information is not oriented for structural engineers, introductory texts are not enough theoretical and you have US units throughout.In Pilkey's book, you have the perfect structural engineer's reference: many chapters, with at first a list of notation, explanation of conventions, and then a short introductory course on the subject together with solved examples. After that, there it is: magnificent well-organized "tables", with all kind of data of prime interest to a structural engineer. As an example, I'll mention that you can find plastic section modulus for about 11 section types.Units are mixed for examples, but for data you have always both US and SI units furnished.For all entries, Pilkey's book is far more complete than the Roark's one. You'll be surprised by the vastness and depth of formulas furnished. Furthermore, you have structural matrices in each case if you want to do numerical programming.The list of references is up to date and very extensive. It is a pricy book, but you'll not regret it!

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