A
cantilever is a
beam supported on only one end. The beam
carries the load to the support where it is resisted by
moment and
shear
stress. Cantilever construction allows for overhanging
structures without external bracing. Cantilevers can also be
constructed with
trusses or
slab.
This is in contrast to a simply supported beam such as those found
in a
post and lintel system. A
simply supported beam is supported at both ends with loads applied
between the supports.
In bridges, towers, and buildings
Cantilevers are widely found in construction, notably in
cantilever bridges and
balconies (see
corbel). In
cantilever bridges the cantilevers are usually built as pairs, with
each cantilever used to support one end of a central section.
The
Forth
Bridge
in Scotland
is a famous
example of a cantilever truss
bridge.
Temporary cantilevers are often used in construction. The partially
constructed structure creates a cantilever, but the completed
structure does not act as a cantilever. This is very helpful when
temporary supports, or
falsework, cannot
be used to support the structure while it is being built (e.g.,
over a busy roadway or river, or in a deep valley).
So some truss arch bridges (see Navajo Bridge
) are built from each side as cantilevers until the
spans reach each other and are then jacked apart to stress them in
compression before final joining. Nearly all
cable-stayed bridges are built using
cantilevers as this is one of their chief advantages. Many box
girder bridges are built
segmentally, or in short pieces. This type
of construction lends itself well to balanced cantilever
construction where the bridge is built in both directions from a
single support.
In an
architectural application, Frank
Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater
used cantilevers to project large balconies.
The East
Stand at Elland
Road
Stadium in Leeds was, when completed, the largest
cantilever stand in the world holding 17,000 spectators.The
roof built over the stands at Old Trafford
Football Ground
uses a cantilever so that no supports will block
views of the field. The old, now demolished Miami Stadium
had a similar roof over the spectator area.
The
largest cantilever in Europe is located at St James' Park
in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
, the home stadium of Newcastle United F.C.
Image:ForthBridgeEdinburgh.jpg|The
Forth
Bridge
, a cantilever truss bridge.Image:Pierre
Pflimlin Bridge UC Adjusted.jpg|This concrete balanced cantilever
bridge under construction employs movable cantilevers to support
formwork.
Image:FallingwaterCantilever570320cv.jpg|A
notable cantilever balcony of the Fallingwater
house, by Frank Lloyd
Wright.Image:Balcony in Rome.jpg|A balcony created by a
cantilever slab.
Image:Canton Viaduct Cantilever.jpg|A
cantilevered railroad deck and fence on the Canton Viaduct
File:Cantilever-barn-moa-tn1.jpg|A cantilever
barn from rural
Appalachia
Less obvious examples of cantilevers are free-standing
radio towers without
guy-wires and
chimneys,
which resist being blown over by the wind through cantilever action
at their base.
In aircraft
Another use of the cantilever is in
fixed-wing aircraft design, pioneered by
Hugo Junkers in 1915. Early aircraft
wings typically bore their loads by using two (or more) wings in a
biplane configuration braced with wires.
They were similar to
truss bridges,
having been developed by
Octave
Chanute, a railroad bridge engineer. The wings were braced with
crossed wires so they would stay parallel, as well as front-to-back
to resist twisting. The cables generated considerable drag, and
there was constant experimentation on ways to eliminate them.
It was also desirable to build a
monoplane
aircraft, as the airflow around one wing negatively affects the
other in a biplane model. Early monoplanes used either struts (as
do some current light aircraft), or cables (as do some modern
home-built aircraft). The advantage in using struts or cables is a
reduction in weight for a given strength, but with the penalty of
additional drag. This reduces maximum speed, and increases fuel
consumption.
The most common current wing design is the cantilever. A single
large beam, called the
main spar, runs through the wing, typically
nearer the
leading edge at about 25
percent of the total
chord. In
flight, the wings generate
lift, and
the wing spars are designed to carry this load through the fuselage
to the other wing. To resist fore and aft movement, the wing will
usually be fitted with a second smaller drag-spar nearer the
trailing edge, tied to the main spar
with structural elements or a stressed skin. The wing must also
resist twisting forces, done either by a
monocoque "
D" tube structure
forming the leading edge, or by the aforementioned linking two
spars in some form of
box beam or
lattice girder structure.
Cantilever wings require a much heavier spar than would otherwise
be needed in cable-stayed designs. However, as the size of an
aircraft increases, the additional weight penalty decreases.
Eventually a line was crossed in the 1920s, and designs
increasingly turned to the cantilever design. By the 1940s almost
all larger aircraft used the cantilever exclusively, even on
smaller surfaces such as the horizontal stabilizer.
In microelectromechanical systems
Cantilevered beams are the most ubiquitous structures in the field
of
microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS). MEMS cantilevers are commonly fabricated from
silicon (Si),
silicon nitride (SiN), or
polymers. The fabrication process typically involves
undercutting the cantilever structure to
release it, often
with an anisotropic wet or
dry
etching technique. Without cantilever transducers,
atomic force microscopy would not be
possible. A large number of research groups are attempting to
develop cantilever arrays as
biosensors
for medical diagnostic applications. MEMS cantilevers are also
finding application as
radio
frequency filter and
resonators.
Two equations are key to understanding the behavior of MEMS
cantilevers. The first is
Stoney's formula, which relates
cantilever end
deflection δ to applied
stress σ:
\delta = \frac{3\sigma\left(1 - \nu \right)}{E}
\left(\frac{L}{t}\right)^2
where ν is
Poisson's ratio, E is
Young's modulus, L is the beam
length and t is the cantilever thickness. Very sensitive optical
and capacitive methods have been developed to measure changes in
the static deflection of cantilever beams used in dc-coupled
sensors.
The second is the formula relating the cantilever
spring constant k to the cantilever
dimensions and material constants:
k = \frac{F}{\delta} = \frac{Ewt^3}{4L^3}
where F is force and w is the cantilever width. The spring constant
is related to the cantilever resonance frequency \omega_0 by the
usual
harmonic oscillator
formula \omega_0 = \sqrt{k/m}. A change in the force applied to a
cantilever can shift the resonance frequency. The frequency shift
can be measured with exquisite accuracy using
heterodyne techniques and is the basis of
ac-coupled cantilever sensors.
The principal advantage of MEMS cantilevers is their cheapness and
ease of fabrication in large arrays. The challenge for their
practical application lies in the square and cubic dependences of
cantilever performance specifications on dimensions. These
superlinear dependences mean that cantilevers are quite sensitive
to variation in process parameters. Controlling
residual stress can also be difficult.
Image:MEMS Microcantilever in Resonance.png|MEMS cantilever in
resonance
In storage applications
Warehouse storage
A cantilever rack is a type of
warehouse
storage system consisting of the vertical column, the base, the
arms, and the horizontal and/or cross bracing. These componenets
are fabricated from both roll formed and structural steel. The
horizontal and/or cross bracing are used to connect two or more
columns together. They are commonly found in
lumber yards, woodworking shops, and plumbing
supply warehouses.
Portable storage
A folding cantilever tray is a type of stacked shelf that can
unfolded to allow convenient access to items on multiple tiers
simultaneously. The shelves can be collapsed when not in use for
more compact storage. Because of these proporties folding
cantilever trays are often used in
luggage
and
toolboxes.
See also
References