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Structural design of buildings /

Presented in a clear structure and user-friendly style, Paul Smith's Structural Design of Buildings goes through all the structural aspects of a building and assesses the importance of the different components.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Smith, Paul, 1966 October 17- (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Chichester, West Sussex, United Kingdom : Wiley Blackwell, [2016]
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • The development of building knowledge
  • Styles of architecture and building construction
  • Weight and mass
  • Permanent actions or dead loads
  • Variable actions or imposed loads
  • Wind load
  • Accidental actions
  • Seismic action
  • BS EN 1991: Actions on structures EC1
  • Combinations of load and factors of safety
  • Stress
  • Strain
  • Young's modulus or modulus of elasticity
  • Plastic deformation
  • Buckling
  • Local buckling
  • Second moment of area
  • Centre of gravity
  • Lateral torsional buckling
  • Neutral axis
  • Bending force
  • Shear force and bending moment
  • Deflection
  • Static equilibrium
  • Internal forces
  • Derivation of shear force
  • Derivation of bending moment
  • Derivation of deflection
  • Basic theory of bending
  • Moment of resistance
  • Combined bending and direct stress
  • External and internal statically determinate structures
  • Connections and restraints
  • Stiffness
  • Buildings and load paths.
  • Breathable and non-breathable construction
  • Timber frame
  • Stone
  • Modern timber frame construction
  • Solid brick construction
  • Cavity construction
  • Steel construction
  • Commercial steel portal frames
  • Precast concrete construction
  • Steel properties
  • Lateral torsional buckling
  • The effect of end restraints on a beam
  • Bending failure
  • Local buckling
  • Shear failure
  • Web bearing and buckling
  • Deflection
  • Fire and corrosion
  • The history of cement and concrete
  • Cement
  • Water and workability [--] now known as consistence
  • Failure of concrete
  • Strength of concrete
  • Concrete mix designs
  • Creep
  • Environment
  • Air-entrained concrete
  • Accelerators and retarders
  • Plasticizers
  • Fly ash, silica flume and ground granulated blast furnace slag
  • Anti-corrosion
  • Grading of timber
  • Moisture
  • Air-dried timber
  • Kiln-dried timber
  • Dimensions of timber
  • Shear
  • Bending
  • Deflection.
  • Purpose of foundations
  • The history of foundations
  • Building Regulation requirements
  • Stepped foundation
  • Types of foundation
  • Piles
  • Bearing pressure
  • Bearing capacity
  • Eccentric loading on foundations
  • Climatic and moisture changes
  • Physical damage by trees
  • Underpinning
  • The strength of walls
  • Masonry unit
  • Frost resistance and soluble salts
  • Concrete blocks
  • Mortar
  • Lime putty (non-hydraulic lime)
  • Hydraulic lime
  • Important rules in the use of lime mortars
  • Cement
  • Characteristic strength of masonry
  • Slenderness ratio
  • Flexural stiffness and the second moment of area
  • Euler load
  • Leaning walls and stability
  • Movement joints
  • Changes due to temperature changes
  • Changes due to moisture changes
  • Traditional design of walls
  • Middle-third rule
  • Timber frame walls and raking
  • The history of floors
  • Modern solid floors
  • Suspended floors and engineered floor joists.
  • Holes and notches in floor joists
  • Limecrete
  • The use of plaster and lime ash floors
  • Beam and block suspended floors and hollow core floors
  • Damp
  • Salts
  • Sulphate attack
  • Ceilings
  • Trussed and cut roofs
  • Modern truss roofs
  • Cut roofs
  • Roof components
  • Wind bracing
  • Roof spread
  • Overloading of roof members
  • Alterations to roof structures
  • Traditional timber frame building trusses
  • Modern rafter design
  • Flat roof construction
  • The history of arches
  • Inversion theory
  • Line of thrust
  • Formation of hinges
  • Visible line of thrust
  • Height and thickness of an arch
  • Gothic arch
  • Domes
  • Columns
  • The importance of understanding geology
  • Sinkholes
  • Landslips
  • Mining
  • Loess
  • Quick sand
  • Seismic activity
  • Drainage and the water table
  • Site investigation
  • Boreholes
  • Trenches
  • Geophysics
  • Gravity surveys
  • Magnetic surveys
  • Electromagnetic surveys
  • Electrical surveys.
  • Ground-penetrating radar
  • Seismic reflection surveys
  • Seismic refraction
  • Made-up ground or fill
  • Walkover
  • Japanese knotweed
  • Buddleia
  • Desk study
  • Radon
  • Disproportionate collapse
  • Class 1
  • Class 2A
  • Class 2B
  • Class 3
  • Building Regulations Part A
  • Slenderness ratio
  • Buttresses and end restraints
  • Lateral restraint of walls and roofs
  • Structural considerations
  • Safety factors
  • Theory behind the design
  • Loading
  • Angle of shearing resistance
  • Effects of water
  • Proportions of walls
  • Design example
  • Specialist advice
  • Types of wall
  • Basements
  • Preliminary considerations
  • Removal of walls
  • Alterations to timbers and trusses
  • Alterations to roof structures for dormers
  • Loft conversions
  • Flitch beams
  • Lintels and openings
  • Structural defects
  • Compression
  • Tension
  • Shear
  • Random cracking
  • Location of cracking
  • Roof spread
  • Settlement.
  • Shrinkage due to thermal and moisture movements
  • Movement of brickwork along the damp-proof course
  • Subsidence
  • Chemical reactions
  • High alumina cement (HAC)
  • Wall tie failure
  • Damp
  • Overloading
  • Professional advice
  • Daisy wheel
  • The golden number or golden mean
  • Pythagoras
  • Masonic markings
  • Ordnance datum bench marks.