Abstract

Cylindrical metal silos are commonly elevated to provide access space beneath to directly discharge the contained materials into transportation systems. Evenly spaced column supports are commonly utilized. In larger silos, the discrete forces from supports are more evenly transferred and distributed into the cylindrical shell wall by using a ring beam. A fundamental assumption in the design of the silo shell is that the meridional compressive stresses are relatively uniformly distributed around the circumference. This assumption can easily be violated if the ring beam is flexible, so it is necessary to determine the ring stiffness needed to achieve a particular degree of uniformity of support. Current methods of assessing this stiffness rely on onerous finite-element analysis, which only provides information for the specific design being checked. In this paper, a criterion is developed to identify the required ring beam stiffness to achieve a particular degree of uniformity in the shell stresses. It is ba...

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