Global buckling
Introduction
Buckling is a phenomenon of elastic instability that can occur in slender compressed elements, and is manifested by the appearance of significant displacements transverse to the main direction of compression.
In structural engineering, the phenomenon appears mainly in pillars and columns, and results in the appearance of additional bending in the pillar when it is subjected to the action of axial forces of some importance.
The appearance of deflection due to buckling severely limits the compressive strength of a column or any type of slender piece. Finally, above a certain value of the axial compression load, called critical buckling load, a situation of elastic instability can occur and then the deformation will easily increase, producing additional stresses that will exceed the breaking stress, causing the ruin of the structural element. In addition to ordinary flexural buckling, there is torsional buckling or elastic instability caused by an excessive torsional moment.
There are different ways or modes of failure due to buckling. For a structural element it is frequently necessary to verify several of them and ensure that the loads are far from the critical loads associated with each mode or manner of buckling. Typical modes are:
Flexural buckling
Contenido
Los pilares y barras comprimidas de celosías pueden presentar diversos modos de fallo en función de su esbeltez mecánica:.
Local buckling
Local buckling is that which appears in isolated pieces or elements or that structurally can be considered isolated. In this case, the magnitude of the critical load is given according to the conditions of the union, linking or fastening at the ends. For a piece that can be considered biarticulated at its ends, Euler's critical load is given by:.
Being: F, the critical load; E, Young's modulus of the material from which the bar is made; I, minimum moment of inertia of the cross section of the bar; L, length of the bar and λ the mechanical slenderness of the piece. When the clamping conditions of the ends are different, the Euler critical load is given by an equation of the type:.