Structural Engineering Is A Field of
Structural Engineering Is A Field of
Burj Khalifa, in Dubai, the world's tallest building, shown under construction in 2007 (since completed)
Structural engineering is a field of engineering dealing with the analysis and design of structures that support or resist loads. Structural
engineering is usually considered a specialty within civil engineering, but it can also be studied in its own right.[1] Structural engineers are most
commonly involved in the design of buildings and large nonbuilding structures[2] but they can also be involved in the design of machinery,medical
equipment, vehicles or any item where structural integrity affects the item's function or safety. Structural engineers must ensure their designs
satisfy given design criteria, predicated on safety (e.g. structures must not collapse without due warning) or serviceability and performance (e.g.
building sway must not cause discomfort to the occupants). Buildings are made to endure massive loads as well as changing climate and natural
disasters.
Structural engineering theory is based upon physical laws and empirical knowledge of the structural performance of different landscapes and
materials. Structural engineering design utilises a relatively small number of basic structural elements to build up structural systems that can be
very complex. Structural engineers are responsible for making creative and efficient use of funds, structural elements and materials to achieve
these goals.[2]
Contents
[hide]
1 Structural engineer
2 History of structural
engineering
3 Specializations
4 Structural elements
5 Structural engineering
theory
6 Materials
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
[edit]Structural engineer
Structural engineers are responsible for engineering design and analysis. Entry-level structural engineers may design the individual structural
elements of a structure, for example thebeams, columns, and floors of a building. More experienced engineers would be responsible for the
Structural engineers often specialize in particular fields, such as bridge engineering, building engineering, pipeline engineering, industrial
Structural engineering has existed since humans first started to construct their own structures. It became a more defined and formalised
profession with the emergence of thearchitecture profession as distinct from the engineering profession during the industrial revolution in the late
19th Century. Until then, the architect and the structural engineer were usually one and the same - the master builder. Only with the development
of specialised knowledge of structural theories that emerged during the 19th and early 20th centuries did the professional structural engineer
The role of a structural engineer today involves a significant understanding of both static and dynamic loading, and the structures that are
available to resist them. The complexity of modern structures often requires a great deal of creativity from the engineer in order to ensure the
structures support and resist the loads they are subjected to. A structural engineer will typically have a four or five year undergraduate degree,
followed by a minimum of three years of professional practice before being considered fully qualified. [3]
Structural engineers are licensed or accredited by different learned societies and regulatory bodies around the world (for example, the Institution
of Structural Engineers in the UK)[3]. Depending on the degree course they have studied and/or the jurisdiction they are seeking licensure in, they
may be accredited (or licensed) as just structural engineers, or as civil engineers, or as both civil and structural engineers.
Structural engineering dates back to 2700 BC when the step pyramid for Pharaoh Djoser was built by Imhotep, the first engineer in history known
by name. Pyramids were the most common major structures built by ancient civilizations because the structural form of a pyramid is inherently
stable and can be almost infinitely scaled (as opposed to most other structural forms, which cannot be linearly increased in size in proportion to
increased loads).[4]
Throughout ancient and medieval history most architectural design and construction was carried out by artisans, such as
stone masons andcarpenters, rising to the role of master builder. No theory of structures existed, and understanding of how structures stood up
was extremely limited, and based almost entirely on empirical evidence of 'what had worked before'. Knowledge was retained by guilds and
seldom supplanted by advances. Structures were repetitive, and increases in scale were incremental. [4]
No record exists of the first calculations of the strength of structural members or the behaviour of structural material, but the profession of
structural engineer only really took shape with the industrial revolution and the re-invention of concrete (see History of concrete). The physical
sciences underlying structural engineering began to be understood in the Renaissance and have been developing ever since.
[edit]Structural failure
The history of structural engineering contains many collapses and failures. Sometimes this is due to obvious negligence, as in the case of
the Pétionville school collapse, in which Rev. Fortin Augustin said that "he constructed the building all by himself, saying he didn't need an
engineer as he had good knowledge of construction" following a partial collapse of the three-story schoolhouse that sent neighbors fleeing. [5] The
In other cases structural failures require careful study, and the results of these inquiries have resulted in improved practices and greater
understanding of the science of structural engineering. Some such studies are the result of Forensic engineering investigations where the original
engineer seems to have done everything in accordance with the state of the profession and acceptable practice yet a failure still eventuated. A
famous case of structural knowledge and practice being advanced in this manner can be found in a series of failures involving Box girders which
[edit]Specializations
[edit]Building structures
Structural building engineering includes all structural engineering related to the design of buildings. It is the branch of structural engineering that is
close to architecture.
Structural building engineering is primarily driven by the creative manipulation of materials and forms and the underlying mathematical and
scientific ideas to achieve an end which fulfills its functional requirements and is structurally safe when subjected to all the loads it could
reasonably be expected to experience. This is subtly different from architectural design, which is driven by the creative manipulation of materials
and forms, mass, space, volume, texture and light to achieve an end which is aesthetic, functional and often artistic.
The architect is usually the lead designer on buildings, with a structural engineer employed as a sub-consultant. The degree to which each
discipline actually leads the design depends heavily on the type of structure. Many structures are structurally simple and led by architecture, such
as multi-storey office buildings and housing, while other structures, such as tensile structures, shells and gridshells are heavily dependent on their
form for their strength, and the engineer may have a more significant influence on the form, and hence much of the aesthetic, than the architect.
The structural design for a building must ensure that the building is able to stand up safely, able to function without excessive deflections or
movements which may cause fatigue of structural elements, cracking or failure of fixtures, fittings or partitions, or discomfort for occupants. It must
account for movements and forces due to temperature, creep, cracking and imposed loads. It must also ensure that the design is practically
buildable within acceptable manufacturing tolerances of the materials. It must allow the architecture to work, and the building services to fit within
the building and function (air conditioning, ventilation, smoke extract, electrics, lighting etc.). The structural design of a modern building can be
Earthquake engineering
Façade engineering
Fire engineering
Roof engineering
Tower engineering
Wind engineering
Earthquake engineering structures are those engineered to withstand various types of hazardous earthquake exposures at the sites of their
particular location.
Both earthquake and military general design principles are similar: be ready to slow down or mitigate the advance of a possible attacker.
Snapshot from shake-table video [1] of testing base-isolated (right) and regular (left) building model
pyramid at Chichen Itza shown above. In fact, many structures considered strong may in fact be actually stiff, which may result in poor seismic
performance.
Now, the most powerful and budgetary tool of the earthquake engineering is base isolation which pertains to the passive structural vibration
control technologies.
Civil structural engineering includes all structural engineering related to the built environment. It includes:
Dams Railways
Foundations walls
Pipelines Tunnels
Waterways
infrastructure
The structural engineer is the lead designer on these structures, and often the sole designer. In the design of structures such as these, structural
safety is of paramount importance (in the UK, designs for dams, nuclear power stations and bridges must be signed off by a chartered engineer).
Civil engineering structures are often subjected to very extreme forces, such as large variations in temperature, dynamic loads such as waves or
traffic, or high pressures from water or compressed gases. They are also often constructed in corrosive environments, such as at sea, in industrial
[edit]Mechanical structures
Principals of structural engineering are applied to variety of mechanical (moveable) structures. The design of static structures assumes they
always have the same geometry (in fact, so-called static structures can move significantly, and structural engineering design must take this into
account where necessary), but the design of moveable or moving structures must account for fatigue, variation in the method in which load is
The forces which parts of a machine are subjected to can vary significantly, and can do so at a great rate. The forces which a boat or aircraft are
subjected to vary enormously and will do so thousands of times over the structure's lifetime. The structural design must ensure that such
structures are able to endure such loading for their entire design life without failing.
Cranes
Elevators
Escalators
[edit]Structural elements
Any structure is essentially made up of only a small number of different types of elements:
Columns
Beams
Plates
Arches
Shells
Catenaries
Many of these elements can be classified according to form (straight, plane / curve) and dimensionality (one-dimensional / two-dimensional):
One-dimensional Two-dimensional
straigh
curve plane curve
t
[edit]Columns
Main article: Column
Columns are elements that carry only axial force - either tension or compression - or both axial force and bending (which is technically called a
beam-column but practically, just a column). The design of a column must check the axial capacity of the element, and the buckling capacity.
The buckling capacity is the capacity of the element to withstand the propensity to buckle. Its capacity depends upon its geometry, material, and
the effective length of the column, which depends upon the restraint conditions at the top and bottom of the column. The effective length
The capacity of a column to carry axial load depends on the degree of bending it is subjected to, and vice versa. This is represented on an
[edit]Beams
Main article: Beam
A beam may be defined as an element in which one dimemsion is much greater than the other two and the applied loads are usually normal to
the main axis of the element. Beams and columns are called line elements and are often represented by simple lines in structural modeling.
simply supported (supported vertically at each end; horizontally on only one to withstand friction, and able to rotate at the supports)
a combination of the above (ex. supported at one end and in the middle)
Beams are elements which carry pure bending only. Bending causes one part of the section of a beam (divided along its length) to go into
compression and the other part into tension. The compression part must be designed to resist buckling and crushing, while the tension part must
Main article: Truss
A masonry arch
A truss is a structure comprising two types of structural elements; compression members and tension members (i.e. struts and ties). Most trusses
use gusset plates to connect intersecting elements. Gusset plates are relatively flexible and minimize bending moments at the connections, thus
Trusses are usually utilised in span large distances, where it would be uneconomical to use solid beams.
[edit]Plates
Plates carry bending in two directions. A concrete flat slab is an example of a plate. Plates are understood by using continuum mechanics, but
due to the complexity involved they are most often designed using a codified empirical approach, or computer analysis.
They can also be designed with yield line theory, where an assumed collapse mechanism is analysed to give an upper bound on the collapse
[edit]Shells
See also: Gridshell
Shells derive their strength from their form, and carry forces in compression in two directions. A dome is an example of a shell. They can be
designed by making a hanging-chain model, which will act as a catenary in pure tension, and inverting the form to achieve pure compression.
[edit]Arches
Main article: Arch
Arches carry forces in compression in one direction only, which is why it is appropriate to build arches out of masonry. They are designed by
ensuring that the line of thrust of the force remains within the depth of the arch.
[edit]Catenaries
Catenaries derive their strength from their form, and carry transverse forces in pure tension by deflecting (just as a tightrope will sag when
someone walks on it). They are almost always cable or fabric structures. A fabric structure acts as a catenary in two directions.
Figure of a bolt in shear stress. Top figure illustrates single shear, bottom figure illustrates double shear.
Structural engineering depends upon a detailed knowledge of loads, physics and materials to understand and predict how structures support and
resist self-weight and imposed loads. To apply the knowledge successfully a structural engineer will need a detailed knowledge
ofmathematics and of relevant empirical and theoretical design codes. He will also need to know about the corrosion resistance of the materials
and structures, especially when those structures are exposed to the external environment.
[edit]Materials
Structural engineering depends on the knowledge of materials and their properties, in order to understand how different materials support and
resist loads.
Iron:
Wrought iron
Cast iron
Steel
Stainless steel
Concrete:
Reinforced concrete
Prestressed concrete
Aluminium
Composites
Alloy
Masonry
Timber
Adobe
Bamboo
Carbon fibre
Mudbrick
Roofing materials
[edit]See also
Civil engineering S
Construction engineering S