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Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

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Page 1: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and Construction

of a

Spaghetti Bridge

Michael Karweit

Department of Chemical Engineering

Johns Hopkins University

Page 2: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Why build a spaghetti bridge?

1) To take math and science out of the textbook and into a

project involving design, planning, and construction.

2) Because the process is instructive and fun, and it exemplifies

the difficulties of putting theory into practice.

Math and science? Now I’m worried.

What kind of math and science?

In principle, you can build a bridge without math and science.

But if you want to build one that can carry a maximum load, then

you need to understand the material properties of spaghetti,

the theory of beams, and the physics of canceling forces (statics).

Page 3: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Why spaghetti? Why not toothpicks or balsa wood?

Spaghetti is very unforgiving. Design is much more important

in a spaghetti bridge than a toothpick one. Spaghetti is also

available in a nice form for construction--long cylindrical rods.

And, one can’t complain about the cost. . .

So, what’s the project goal?

To build a bridge out of only spaghetti and glue that

spans a 50 cm, weighs no more than 250 gms, and

supports the heaviest load suspended from the center of

the span. The bridge is to be supported only by horizontal

surfaces at each end.

Page 4: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Some properties of spaghetti (dry)

1. Ultimate tensile strength ~2000 psi

2. Stiffness (Young’s modulus) E ~10,000,000 psi

(E=stress/strain)

For comparison, cast aluminum (wet or dry):

1. Ultimate tensile strength ~10,000psi

2. Stiffness E~10,000,000psi

Page 5: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Glues:

1) White glue: Not good. Since it’s water based, the

spaghetti is softened by the glue. Glue joints take

forever to dry. Once dry, joints are not very strong.

2) Model airplane glue: So so. Dries relatively quickly

but is slightly flexible when dry. Glue joints should

be rigid.

3) Hot-melt plastics (glue guns): Easiest to use, but

joints far too flexible.

4) Epoxy: Best solution--especially the 5 minute kind.

Creates rigid joints. Is messy. Requires careful mixing.

Page 6: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Using 5-minute epoxy:

1) Purchase variety in two separate tubes with nozzle tips.

(Double plunger varieties are too wasteful.)

2) Mix epoxy and make glue joints on wax paper. Epoxy

releases from wax paper fairly readily.

3) Mix very small batches--enough for maybe 5 glue joints.

4) Proportions are very important--50 - 50. Too far away

from this ratio and epoxy will never harden. Many

bridges fail because of unhardened joints.

Page 7: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Using 5-minute epoxy (continued):

5) Squeeze same-size circular blobs of epoxy and hardener

onto wax paper. Look to see that they’re of similar height.

(You’re interested in equal volumes of epoxy and

hardener). Mix together with a matchstick. Dime-size

blobs yield enough epoxy for 6 or so joints.

6) Lacquer thinner (nail polisher remover) is good for

cleaning up uncured epoxy from surfaces and fingers.

Page 8: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Beams and loads--tension:

Beam under tension

Maximum load is tensile strength times cross-sectional area.

For regular spaghetti (diameter = 2mm), maximum load

is ~ 10 pounds.

Load capacity does not depend on length.

Failure occurs when ultimate tensile strength is exceeded.

Page 9: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Beams and loads--compression:

Beam in compression

Failure occurs two ways:

1) When L/d < 10, failure is by crushing

2) When L/d > 10, failure is by buckling

We are almost always concerned with failure by buckling.

L

d

Page 10: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Beams and loads--compressive buckling:

Buckling strength F =k d4/L2

To determine constant of proportionality k:

1) measure length and diameter of a piece of spaghetti

2) hold spaghetti vertically on postal scale

3) press down on spaghetti until it begins to bend

4) read load F on postal scale

5) calculate k

Page 11: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Some consequences of buckling properties:

If a beam of length L and diameter d can support a

compressive load of F,

L

dF

then a beam of length L/2 and diameter d can

support a compressive load of 4F.

L/2

d4F

Page 12: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

L

2d

16F

and a beam of length L and diameter 2d can

support a compressive load of 16F.

Bigger beams can be fabricated out of smaller beams,

as in a truss.

The fabricated beam will have the same buckling strength

as a solid beam, provided the buckling/tension strengths

of the component beams are not exceeded.

Page 13: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Beams and loads--bending:

Very little strength. Never design a structure that

relies on bending strength to support a load.

Page 14: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Statics:

1) At each joint or node: F F Fx y z 0 0 0, ,

2) Joints are assumed to carry no bending loads; therefore

all forces are compression or tension and lie in

the directions of the beams.

x

y

-F

F/2 F/2

Page 15: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Use Bridge Designer to calculate loads:

http://www.jhu.edu/~virtlab/bridge/bridge.htm

Page 16: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and construction ideas:

1) Triangles are a construction engineer’s best friend, i.e.

there are no bending moments in triangular elements.

Good design

Bad design (truss strength depends on bending

strengths of members)

Page 17: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and construction ideas (cont.):

2) Taller is better: note loads on these two structures.

Page 18: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and construction ideas (cont.):

3) Don’t forget about the 3rd dimension. A good design in the

x-y plane, may be a terrible one in the z-direction.

4) Recall: tension members do not need to be fabricated as

trusses. Their strength depends only on cross- sectional area.

5) Plan the total bridge design. Estimate the weight of each of

the components, so that you will not exceed the weight limit.

6) Make a full-size pattern of your bridge. Build the bridge on

this pattern. This will ensure that all components will

assemble properly.

Page 19: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Design and construction ideas (cont.):

.7) If a number of strands of spaghetti are to be used together as a

single member, do not glue their entire lengths. “Spot” glue them

at intervals of about 1”. This will provide adequate strength

without adding excessive weight.

8) For economy of time, joints should be “overlaid” not

“butted”. Butt joints require careful sizing. Overlaid joints

do not. Excess material may be cut off after assembly.

Butt joints Overlaid joints

Page 20: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Which is the better design and why (cont.)?

a) b)

a) b)

Page 21: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

Which is the better design and why?

a) b)

a) b)

Page 22: Design and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge · PDF fileDesign and Construction of a Spaghetti Bridge Michael Karweit Department of Chemical Engineering Johns Hopkins University

> 5cm. < 2mm.

Bridge Decking

Load

50 cm

< 25 cm

Loading Platform

and U-bolt

< 5cm

Total Weight < 250gms.

Bridge Schematic: