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From the engineering consideration that regular tiles and bricks are far from optimal in terms of adding strength to structures, I've been considering that better would be this very particular 2D pattern of tiles and bricks illustrated in this image which I first posted in a topic in Gaia's Art: Comment & Critique forum, Tessellated I - my simple technical drawing, coloured artfully

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View larger version of Tessellated I in Steel 1800 x 800

Representing a surface of "I"-shaped (rotated by 90 degrees, "H"-shaped) steel tiles. The shape is of square proportions, the column of the I being one third of the width of the square and the top and the base one quarter of the height of the square.

Here is an I-tessellation in paving stones -

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But my pattern of I or H tiles or bricks is very specifically designed so that it can be developed into a more detailed 3-D design which introduces further efficient tile-to-tile / brick-to-brick interlocking or making-rigid features which solve some of the limitations and issues arising with structures made from conventional bricks and tiles.

Conventional brickwork structures need a weaker mortar layer to hold a brick wall together -

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Conventional tiled structures need to stick tiles onto a mounting surface -

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These limitations of those brick-to-brick or tile-to-tile bonding methods make for weaker and heavier brick and tile structures than is ideal in some engineering applications.

In particular for temporary brick or tile structures, a high strength to weight ratio is desirable so that the parts of the structure can be moved easily to where they need to be erected.

In addition, temporary structures need the ability to disassemble the structure as easily as it was assembled.

We see examples of ease of disassembling a structure with kids building toys such as Lego and Meccano and in many manufactured products which use such typical features as nuts and bolts and bolt-holes but many other variations to secure one part to another strongly but in a reversible and flexible way.

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So with those requirements in mind, my 2D I / H tessellation pattern was designed with a view to a 3D design of structures which I will now specify and show you a model to help me explain my 3D design more clearly.


3-Dimensional model video

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This video shows my model of the 3-dimensional shape of a simple structure composed of 6 bricks or tiles, each of which, when viewed from one-direction anyway, is a 2-dimensional "I"-shape (equally when rotated by 90 degrees "H"-shaped).

This model has been made from aluminium tubing and in order to distinguish one brick from another they have been coloured using marker pens - so there are two bricks coloured blue, two coloured green and two coloured red. This colouring was necessary for clarity because otherwise the permanent joints within bricks (which are only an artifact of the method to make a brick from square tubing) might be confused with the simple touching surface where two neighbouring bricks abut, abutting securely but without being in any way stuck by glue etc.

This 3-Dimensional model reveals a further design feature of the I or H brick and tile structures, which secures the bricks and tiles together in 2 further dimensions, some such feature being necessary because the 2-D I or H shape in of itself only secures the bricks together in 1 dimension.

This feature is revealed here to be nothing more complicated than dowels or fixing rods which run in the vertical direction of the Is (or the horizontal direction of the Hs) through shafts in the Is' bases and tops and which serve to lock the tops and bases of neighbouring Is together, preventing movement radially from the dowels.

These dowels may henceforth be referred to as "Mazurka Dowels" named after the username of a scientist in an internet science forum who first correctly anticipated this feature of my 3-D design and its function to hold the structure together in all 3-dimensions, in a reply post to my topic there describing in detail only the 2-D tessellation, suggesting somewhat vaguely that some such design element was required for a good 3-D design with a view to seeing who would suggest the solution I had thought of first.

As I explained in that topic I could hardly call those dowels the "Dow dowels" there being too many dows in that name and anyway, my name can be used to reference this particular shape of I or H tile and brick and structures composed of them, as per "Dow tile" "Dow brick" "Dow I-tile" "Dow H-brick" "Dow I-H-brick" "Dow I-H-brick structure" "Dow I-structure" etc

.

Fanatical Zealot

The two problems I see with it are structural integrity, in that a square/cubic block will hold up better than an I shaped one since you won't put unnecessary stress at weird angles, instead of on say, the bulk of the structure (the brick taking the weight, instead of the part of the brick that's jutting out taking the weight), and two because some areas would have a lot more stress while other areas would have a lot less.

If it was steel, or iron, an I-beam shape type thing might increase structural integrity, in some situations, but bricks kind of don't have any flexibility, in that they need to be stacked on top of each other as the solid mass of the brick is providing the bulk of structural integrity (which is true for anything, but unlike say, in Knight Armor, where the bend increases the strength or resistance to deformation dramatically), where as you'd be pointing all the weight on one small joint, per brick. It might work but it might not be as strong.


So I don't think it would be a good idea with a stacked, 3 dimensional brick, but your bottom floor tile thing seems cool. xp
Suicidesoldier#1
The two problems I see with it are structural integrity, in that a square/cubic block will hold up better than an I shaped one since you won't put unnecessary stress at weird angles, instead of on say, the bulk of the structure (the brick taking the weight, instead of the part of the brick that's jutting out taking the weight), and two because some areas would have a lot more stress while other areas would have a lot less.

If it was steel, or iron, an I-beam shape type thing might increase structural integrity, in some situations, but bricks kind of don't have any flexibility, in that they need to be stacked on top of each other as the solid mass of the brick is providing the bulk of structural integrity (which is true for anything, but unlike say, in Knight Armor, where the bend increases the strength or resistance to deformation dramatically), where as you'd be pointing all the weight on one small joint, per brick. It might work but it might not be as strong.


So I don't think it would be a good idea with a stacked, 3 dimensional brick, but your bottom floor tile thing seems cool. xp

Well the I / H shape of the bricks (and the dowels) is with a view to increase the strength of the structure, not the strength of the brick.

However, for that idea to work well, the brick would need to use a stronger material than conventional clay-fired bricks which are still relatively weak, particularly in tension (being pulled apart) - they fracture (crack) very easily - so I am suggesting instead using stronger materials to make the I / H bricks from, such as metal, (so well done for mentioning steel) perhaps reinforced concrete, perhaps metal-ceramic composites, "cermets", perhaps fiber-reinforced plastics. These are the sorts of materials to make bricks for my I / H brick structures. Then however strong the I / H bricks are, the strength appears in the structure and is not lost because of a weak mortar - the weakest point of conventional brickwork which is why brickwork is mainly used for decorative purposes these days.

Quote:
Wikipedia: Brick - Limitations
Starting in the twentieth century, the use of brickwork declined in many areas due to earthquakes. The San Francisco earthquake of 1906 revealed the weaknesses of brick buildings in earthquake-prone areas. Most buildings in San Francisco collapsed during the earthquake, due to the cement-based mortar used to hold the bricks together. During seismic events, the mortar cracks and crumbles, and the bricks are no longer held together.

Fanatical Zealot

Peter Dow
Suicidesoldier#1
The two problems I see with it are structural integrity, in that a square/cubic block will hold up better than an I shaped one since you won't put unnecessary stress at weird angles, instead of on say, the bulk of the structure (the brick taking the weight, instead of the part of the brick that's jutting out taking the weight), and two because some areas would have a lot more stress while other areas would have a lot less.

If it was steel, or iron, an I-beam shape type thing might increase structural integrity, in some situations, but bricks kind of don't have any flexibility, in that they need to be stacked on top of each other as the solid mass of the brick is providing the bulk of structural integrity (which is true for anything, but unlike say, in Knight Armor, where the bend increases the strength or resistance to deformation dramatically), where as you'd be pointing all the weight on one small joint, per brick. It might work but it might not be as strong.


So I don't think it would be a good idea with a stacked, 3 dimensional brick, but your bottom floor tile thing seems cool. xp

Well the I / H shape of the bricks (and the dowels) is with a view to increase the strength of the structure, not the strength of the brick.

However, for that idea to work well, the brick would need to use a stronger material than conventional clay-fired bricks which are still relatively weak, particularly in tension (being pulled apart) - they fracture (crack) very easily - so I am suggesting instead using stronger materials to make the I / H bricks from, such as metal, (so well done for mentioning steel) perhaps reinforced concrete, perhaps metal-ceramic composites, "cermets", perhaps fiber-reinforced plastics. These are the sorts of materials to make bricks for my I / H brick structures. Then however strong the I / H bricks are, the strength appears in the structure and is not lost because of a weak mortar - the weakest point of conventional brickwork which is why brickwork is mainly used for decorative purposes these days.

Quote:
Wikipedia: Brick - Limitations
Starting in the twentieth century, the use of brickwork declined in many areas due to earthquakes. The San Francisco earthquake of 1906 revealed the weaknesses of brick buildings in earthquake-prone areas. Most buildings in San Francisco collapsed during the earthquake, due to the cement-based mortar used to hold the bricks together. During seismic events, the mortar cracks and crumbles, and the bricks are no longer held together.



Ahh, cool. Yes, I suppose if you strengthened the brick considerably, or used something like steel, this structure might actually be better if done properly. xp


HI-BRICKS & DOWELS demonstration video by Peter Dow (YouTube)

Transcript of the video

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Hi everybody and welcome to my "H" / "I" Bricks or HI-BRICKS & DOWELS demonstration video.

This is Peter Dow from Aberdeen, Scotland.

There are two components to a HI-BRICKS & DOWELS construction -

  • the BRICKS, which you can either describe as "H"-shaped or "I"-shaped, depending on which way you turn them around

  • and the DOWELS

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The shape of the "H" or "I" bricks is designed so that they fit together to form a layer or a wall of bricks and importantly, the bricks, just by their very shape, immobilise each other from moving, in one dimension only.

Let's have a look at that.

Let's consider this green brick here as the fixed point.

We can see that it immobilises its neighbouring bricks in one dimension. They can't move with respect to the green brick in this dimension. So that's locked. Even though there is no bricks here or here, the very shape stops it moving in that dimension.

Now the shape doesn't stop the bricks moving with respect to each other in that direction, or in that direction but they are fixed in that one dimension.

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Now if we want to make a rigid structure of bricks in all three dimensions but without using mortar or glue so that we can assemble and disassemble the structure whenever we like, what we need next are the DOWELS.

As you can see, the "I" or "H" bricks have shafts running through the corners so that you can run a dowel through the corners - two shafts, four holes per "I" or "H" brick.

And when you assemble the bricks you can slide the dowel in ... and this forms a structure which is rigid in all three dimensions, which is what we need to form structures.

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