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Structural Engineering Concepts Overview

The document covers various concepts in structural engineering, including the study of forces on solid bodies, types of loads, stress analysis, and design considerations for materials like concrete and steel. It includes multiple-choice questions related to statics, dynamics, types of forces, stress types, and structural design principles. Additionally, it addresses topics such as concrete cover requirements and load classifications.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views2 pages

Structural Engineering Concepts Overview

The document covers various concepts in structural engineering, including the study of forces on solid bodies, types of loads, stress analysis, and design considerations for materials like concrete and steel. It includes multiple-choice questions related to statics, dynamics, types of forces, stress types, and structural design principles. Additionally, it addresses topics such as concrete cover requirements and load classifications.
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© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

STRUCTURAL

1.0 It is the study of the external effects of forces on solid bodies at equilibrium and remains at rest before or after the
application of forces.
a. Statics b. Dynamics c. Engineering Mechanicsd. Strength of Materials
2.0 It is the study of External Forces applied on a body inducing any motion.
a. Statics b. Dynamics c. Engineering Mechanicsd. Strength of Materials
3.0 It is a kind of concentrated load that is distributed evenly.
a. Concentrated load b. Uniformly distributed c. Varying Load d. Surface Load
Load
4.0 A kind of force that is similar direction and does not meet at a common point.
a. Coplanar b. Free Body Diagram c. Concurrent d. Parallel
5.0 A kind of forces that all comes together at a single point
a. Coplanar b. Free Body Diagram c. Concurrent d. Parallel
6.0 Twisting effect on to the cross section
a. Tension b. Shearing c. Bending d. torsion
7.0 This consist both tension and compression forces
a. Tension b. Shearing c. Bending d. torsion
8.0 A force that pushes together and object like squeezed
a. Compression b. Shearing c. Bending d. torsion
9.0 The maximum ordinate in the stress-strain diagram is the ultimate strength or tensile strength.
a. Proportional Limit b. Ultimate strength c. Yield Point d. Elastic Limit
10.0 A deformity that occurs due to compressive strength
a. Resilience b. Stress Trajectories c. Resilience d. Malleability
11.0 A.K.A. Modulus of Torsion. The ratio between shearing stress and shearing strain.
a. Stress Relaxation b. Shear Modulus of c. Modulus of Elasticity d. Stress Relaxation
Elasticity
12.0 the time-dependent decrease in strength capacity in a constrained material
a. Stress Relaxation b. Shear Modulus of c. Modulus of Elasticity d. Stress Relaxation
Elasticity

13.0 What figure is considered Continuous beam


a. Figure 1 b. Figure 2 c. Figure 3 d. Figure 4
14.0 What figure is considered Over hanging beam
a. Figure 1 b. Figure 2 c. Figure 3 d. Figure 4
15.0 What figure is considered Cantilever-Simply Supported Beam – Propped Beam
a. Figure 2 b. Figure 3 c. Figure 6 d. Figure 5
16.0 What figure is considered Simply supported beam
a. Figure 2 b. Figure 5 c. Figure 6 d. Figure 1
Figure 1a

Figure 2 b

Figure 4d

Figure 5d
Figure 3c
17.0 What stress does the figure 1a depict?
a. Bending b. Torsion c. Compression d. Tension
18.0 What kind of stress does the figure 3c depict?
a. Bending b. Torsion c. Compression d. Tension
19.0 What stress does the figure 4d depict?
a. Bending b. Torsion c. Shearing d. Tension
20.0 What stress does the figure 2b depict?
a. Bending b. Torsion c. Shearing d. Tension
21.0 What stress does the figure 5d depict?
a. Bending b. Torsion c. Shearing d. Tension
22.0 Modulus of _____________ is its ability to absorb energy without creating a permanent distortion.
a. Resilience b. Malleability c. Stress Trajectories d. Ductility
23.0 When steel and concrete reach their limiting values of strain simultaneously, it is a design consideration.
a. Over Design b. Balanced Design c. Under reinforced d. Over reinforced
24.0 What is the purpose of concrete cover?
a. Aesthetic purpose b. Oxidation c. Rigidity purposes d. Rust prevention
25.0 Minimum Concrete cover for slab on fill
a. 25 mm b. 40 mm c. 75 mm d. 50 mm
26.0 Minimum Concrete cover exposed to earth
a. 75 mm b. 40 mm c. 50 mm d. 25 mm
27.0 Minimum concrete cover to weather
a. 75 mm b. 50 mm c. 35 mm d. 40 mm
28.0 A composite material that has concrete and steel
a. Steel b. Masonry c. concrete d. Reinforced concrete
29.0 These are materials in the form of powder or fluids that are added to the concrete to give it certain
characteristics not obtainable with plain concrete mixes.
a. Admixture b. Retarder c. Accelerator d. Plasticizer
30.0 Slow the hydration of concrete
a. Air entraining agents b. Pigments c. Plasticizer d. Retarder
31.0 Occupancies and structures housing or supporting toxic or explosive chemicals or substances; Non-building
structures storing, supporting or containing quantities of toxic or explosive substances.
a. Essential facilities b. Hazardous facilities c. Miscellaneous Structures d. Standard Occupancy
32.0 Its content are property line, footing, column, wall location with footing and has floor plan scale
a. Roof framing plan b. Floor framing plan c. General Notes d. Foundation plan
33.0 This plan consists roof beams, truss detail tags, rafters, and bracing designations
a. Roof framing plan b. Floor framing plan c. General Notes d. Foundation plan
34.0 Which of the following load has the most difficult to determine
a. Dead load b. Wind Load c. Impact d. Static
35.0 A sofa is an example of what kind of load?
a. Dead load b. Live load c. Impact d. Static
36.0 A type of load that is constant and accurately computed
a. Dead load b. Live load c. Impact d. Static
37.0 It is considered that the lateral stiffness is less than 70 percent of that in the story above
a. Weak Story b. Soft story c. Story Drift d. Story Drift Ratio
38.0 It is the lateral displacementof one level relative to the level above or below.
a. Story Drift b. Slippage c. Misalignment Deflection
39.0 Which of the following is true regarding overreinforced concrete
a. overreinforced b. Over reinforced c. Less dangerous than d. More dangerous than
concrete is better concrete is equally underreinforced underreinforced
than under reinforced safe with Under
reinforced

40.0 A gap between building that allow them to move during an earthquake.
a. Temperature Gap b. Expansion Gap c. Seismic Gap d. Moisture Gap

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