I have an thin uniform rectangular steel plate supported on 3 sides and free on one, and supporting a uniform load.
I'm trying to determine what thickness of plate I need to keep deflection below a given value, but the deflection may not be "small" compared to the plate thickness, so standard formulae for maximum deflection may not be accurate, and I'm stuck on how to check my answer, or how to calculate it more accurately.
Data:
The plate is a flat rectangular plate (stainless 316 or mild, undecided) anything from 1.5 -15mm thick with an unsupported area at its edge of 1250x500mm total 0.625m^2. It is simply supported along the 500-1250-500 edges and free on the other 1250 edge. The unsupported area carries a static load of 4800 N/m^2 (approx 360kg spread uniformly over the unsupported area) plus its self weight.
The 3 supported edges are unrestrained simple supports that can slide or rotate; they don't resist any movement except in the Z-direction (a bit like it's resting across the 3 edges of a "u" shaped pit).
My question is the thickness of steel plate I need, to ensure maximum deflection (at the middle of the free edge?) stays under possible values of 3mm / 5mm / 10mm (the most likely permitted deflections or at least a good selection to choose between)
The problem is that I am guessing solutions could be thicknesses around 1.5 - 5mm, which means that the deflection might not be "small" compared to its thickness and the usual simple calculation may not be very accurate or trustworthy. But I'm not sure....
Thanks - and any hints how I can work this out myself appreciated but not essential :)