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ASCE ( American Society of Civil Engineers )
Description: The American Society of Civil Engineers represents more than 150,000 members of the civil engineering profession in 177 countries. Founded in 1852, ASCE is the nation’s oldest engineering society. ASCE stands at the forefront of a profession that plans, designs, constructs, and operates society’s economic and social engine – the built environment – while protecting and restoring the natural environment.
Now showing items 1-4 of 4
Curved Box‐Girder Bridges
Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
Abstract: Based on the curvilinear coordinate system, the spline finite strip method is extended to the elasto‐static analysis of circular and noncircular box‐girder bridges. As the curvature effect cannot be ignored, the webs of ...
Buckling of Thin-Walled Eccentric Compressive Members Considering Shear Lag
Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
Abstract: Based on the displacement variational principle, this paper presents a general consistent method, called the spline finite member element method, for buckling analysis of thin-walled eccentric compressive members with ...
Spatial Stability of Thin-Walled Eccentric Compressive Members
Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
Abstract: In this paper, a general method, called the spline finite member element method, is developed for spatial buckling analysis of thin-walled eccentric compressive members with arbitrary cross sections, considering warping. ...
Spline Finite Strip Analysis of General Plates
Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
Abstract: The spline finite strip method was developed recently as a complement to the semi‐analytical finite strip method in dealing with problems involving mixed boundary conditions, concentrated loads, and continuous spans. In ...