Plaxis 3D plate output unit kN*m/m

for the output of a plate element unit, I understand in Plaxis 2D, output unit is kN*m/m, that is in/out of plane issue. 

In plaxis 3D, i have a piled protection slab for gas main, the output unit of plate element is still kN*m/m, how do I interpret the total moment, just ignore the /m ?

M11 and M22 is in 2 different directions of local axis, the plate is very long along the gas main and I don't believe I need to times the length of plate to represent the total moment kN*m. So why the output is shown as kN*m/m

  • Dear John,

    The bending moments show the bending of a plate at a location in a certain direction. To get the total bending of a plate in a certain direction, you should make a cross-section at the desired location and integrate the bending moment over its length (not thickness).
    Keeping in mind the simplified Grashoff method would help to understand the units adopted for the forces: 
    this method considers a slab/plate divided into strips of unit width into the two different directions and the forces are thus in the unit of width. Please refer also to the figures below.

    Answer Verified By: John Chen 

  • Hi Stefanos, Thanks for your explanation, this refreshed my mind of structural theory. I understand the output value from Plaxis 3D is the peak moment per unit width of plate strip, in local axis 1 or 2 direction.  As geotechncial engineer, we do the model and output the value to structural engineer, what structural engineer mostly interested in is the peak value, which is the output result shown. When you say using the integraion of the bending moment over its length (1 or 2 directon), do you mean cut a section along plate, intergration M*dx / X to get averaged moment ? (X is the toal length) 

    My meomory to get moment is the shear force integration over length. Overall, I believe structural engineer is intesreted the peak moment located on a point of plate (directly read from output), rather than total net moment acting across the whole plate length. Please correct me if you see anything not right  

  • Dear John,

    By creating a cross-section of a plate element, you can see the result, e.g. bending moment, along the cross-section length.

    If you need to find the peak value and location you can use the generated plot, e.g. spotting a local peak value. For getting the bending moment at a specific location of that section indeed you integrate the results over this length.

    Indeed, in general, the geotechnical engineer needs to sit with the structural engineer and identify the results one needs from another.

  • Is there an easy way to integrate the area under the curve?  I copied the table of values into Excel but I get multiple values at each point and am not sure if I should be deleting some of the duplicate values.

  • Dear Sonia,

    The reason you get multiple values for each point is because those values come from the different elements connected to that point. The forces are extrapolated from the elements for each element, so in a point that separates 2 elements one gets an extrapolated value from both elements. So in principal one should take a weighted average of those values, weighted because smaller elements are more accurate and extrapolate over a shorter distance, so the value coming from a small element has more importance than the value coming from a large element. So for example, if in a point you have 2 values v1 and v2 coming from 2 elements with surface areas A1 and A2 then the weighted value should be calculated as v = v1 * A1/(A1+A2) + v2 * A2/(A1+A2).

    But you don't have to do that yourself. If you draw a cross section in 3D then in the cross section plot you can choose from the View menu the option "Use result smoothing" and then the cross section will be redrawn using the weighted values. Also in the table you will then see you still have multiple values per point, but all those values are the same now.

    With kind regards,

    Dennis Waterman