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'Indestructible' bridges come closer to reality

Washington D.C, Jul 14 (ANI): Soon, we might have bridges that cannot be destructed.

ANI Jul 14, 2016 18:18 IST googleads

'Indestructible' bridges come closer to reality
Washington D.C, Jul 14 (ANI): Soon, we might have bridges that cannot be destructed. The University of Warwick researchers have taken a design process called 'form-finding', inspired by the natural world, to another level. Form-finding enables the design of rigid structures that follow a strong natural form - structures that are sustained by a force of pure compression or tension, with no bending stresses, which are the main points of weakness in other structures. This could, for the first time, lead to the design of bridges and buildings that can take any combination of permanent loading without generating complex stresses. Such structures will have enhanced safety, and long durability, without the need for repair or restructuring. Researcher Wanda Lewis has been developing mathematical models that implement nature's design principles and produce simple stress patterns in structures. The principles behind her mathematical models are illustrated using physical form-finding experiments involving pieces of fabric or chains, for example. A piece of fabric is suspended and allowed to relax into its natural, gravitational, minimum energy shape; then that shape is frozen into a rigid object and inverted. She finds the coordinates of this shape through computation by simulating the gravitational forces applied to the structure. This produces a shape (a natural form) that can withstand the load with ease. Lewis argues that "nature's design principles cannot be matched by conventional engineering design." While classical architectural designs are appealing to the eye, they aren't necessarily structurally sound: "aesthetics is an important aspect of any design, and we have been programmed to view some shapes, such as circular arches or spherical domes as aesthetic. We often build them regardless of the fact that they generate complex stresses, and are, therefore, structurally inefficient," said Lewis. The work is published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. (ANI)

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