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Structural mechanics

Type of study Bachelor
Language of instruction English
Code 228-0231/02
Abbreviation SM
Course title Structural mechanics
Credits 5
Coordinating department Department of Structural Mechanics
Course coordinator doc. Ing. Petr Konečný, Ph.D.

Subject syllabus

Outline:
1. Introduction to the theory of probabilistic calculations and reliability of the constructions, the explanation of the reliability background of the standards for designing civil constructions (e.g. Eurocode), design and assessment uncertainty, limit states.
2. The basics of the probabilistic theory, random effects and their operations, conditional probability.
3. Random variable quantity (discrete and continuous), frequency and distribution functions, basic types of random probability distribution, characteristics of random variables.
4. Description of the random variable quantities, creation of the histogram, evaluation of the numerical sets.
5. Loads and load combination effects.
6. Idealized stochastic model with random variables, structural strength and load effect, reliability function, conditions of reliability, limit states and application in a stochastic model, calculation of the failure probability, design probability.
7. Approximation methods SORM, FORM.
8. Numerical simulation methods based on Monte Carlo method, generator of the pseudorandom numbers.
9. Numerical simulation methods – Latin Hypercube Sampling, Importance Sampling.
10. Numerical method Direct Optimized Probabilistic Calculation (DOProC), optimizing of the calculation.
11. Reliability software.
12. Probabilistic assessment of the lifetime of the structure, probabilistic optimizing of the structure, structures affected by material fatigue.
13. Random processes and random fields, advanced methods of reliability engineering (genetic algorithms, fuzzy set theory, chaos theory).
14. Introduction to the risk engineering.

E-learning

Studijní opory k dispozici v IS edison a na lms.vsb.cz

Literature

1. Felippa, C.A., Introduction to Finite Element Method. Fall 2001. University of Colorado. 18 Sept. 2005.
https://www.colorado.edu/engineering/CAS/courses.d/IFEM.d/
2. Zienkiewicz, O.C. and Taylor, R.L. The Finite Element Method: Its Basis and Fundamentals, Seventh Edition, Butterworth-Heinemann, 2000.

Advised literature

1. Gere, Timoshenko: Mechanics of materials, PWS-Kent, Boston, 1990
2. SCIA online tutorials: http://www.scia-online.cz/index.php?typ=CDA&showid=806