Buckling Analysis: Concept & Procedure
Buckling Analysis: Concept & Procedure
What is Buckling ?
In engineering, buckling is a failure mode characterised by a sudden failure of a structural member that is subjected to high compressive stresses where the actual compressive stresses at failure are smaller than the ultimate compressive stresses that the material is capable of withstanding. This mode of failure is also described as failure due to elastic instability.
Buckling proceeds in manner which may be either: Stable: in which case displacements increase in a controlled fashion as loads are increased, ie. the structure's ability to sustain loads is maintained, or Unstable: in which case deformations increase instantaneously, the load carrying capacity nose- dives and the structure collapses catastrophically
If buckling deflections become too large then the structure fails this is a geometric consideration, completely divorced from any material strength consideration. If a component or part thereof is prone to buckling then its design must satisfy both strength and buckling safety constraints.
Definitions
The behaviour of a buckling system is reflected in the shape of its loaddisplacement curve - referred to as the equilibrium path. The lateral or 'outof-plane' displacement, , is preferred to the load displacement, q, in this context since it is more descriptive of buckling.
Nothing is visible when the load on a column first increases from zero - the column is stable, there is no buckling, and no out- of- plane displacement. The P- equilibrium path is thus characterised by a vertical segment the primary path - which lasts until the increasing load reaches the critical Euler load Pc = 2 EImin/L2 a constant characteristic of the column When the load reaches the Euler load, buckling suddenly takes place without any further load increase, and lateral deflections grow instanteously in either equally probable direction. After buckling therefore, the equilibrium path bifurcates into two symmetric secondary paths as illustrated. Clearly the critical Euler load limits the column's safe load capacity.
2.
Solution > Define Loads > Apply > Structural > Displacement > On Keypoints The eignenvalue solver uses a unit force to determine the necessary buckling load. Applying a load other than 1 will scale the answer by a factor of the load. Apply a vertical (FY) point load of -1 N to the top of the beam (keypoint 2). Fix Keypoint 1 (ie all DOF constrained). The applied loads and constraints should now appear as shown in the figure below:
View the Buckling Load To display the minimum load required to buckle the beam select General Postproc > List Results > Detailed Summary. The value listed under 'TIME/FREQ' is the load (41,123), which is in Newtons for this example. If more than one mode was selected in the steps above, the corresponding loads would be listed here as well.
First Mode
Second Mode
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