The architectural application of shells whose boundaries subtend a constant solid angle
Emil Adiels, Mats Ander, Chris J. K. Williams

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method for designing shell surfaces based on constant solid angles, enabling control over boundary slopes and structural properties for architectural applications.
Contribution
It proposes a new geometric technique using the Gauss-Bonnet theorem and Newton's method to generate constant solid angle surfaces without requiring an initial mesh.
Findings
Enables control of boundary slope and span-to-height ratio.
Suitable for planar quadrilateral surface grids.
Applicable in form finding for shells with concentrated forces.
Abstract
Surface geometry plays a central role in the design of bridges, vaults and shells, using various techniques for generating a geometry which aims to balance structural, spatial, aesthetic and construction requirements. In this paper we propose the use of surfaces defined such that given closed curves subtend a constant solid angle at all points on the surface and form its boundary. Constant solid angle surfaces enable one to control the boundary slope and hence achieve an approximately constant span-to-height ratio as the span varies, making them structurally viable for shell structures. In addition, when the entire surface boundary is in the same plane, the slope of the surface around the boundary is constant and thus follows a principal curvature direction. Such surfaces are suitable for surface grids where planar quadrilaterals meet the surface boundaries. They can also be used as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Numerical Analysis Techniques · Tribology and Lubrication Engineering · Advanced Theoretical and Applied Studies in Material Sciences and Geometry
