Bopeco
Mechanical
- Feb 19, 2015
- 12
Hi to all, i'm modeling a beam with hollow rectangular section subjected to bending and once i have verified that the stresses in the structure are ok i want to be sure that the beam is verified to buckling.
The vertical sides are very slender so i'm expecting those to be the weakest point.
First i ran a linear buckling analysis and it gave me the first eigenvalue of 1.6 so i'm pretty confident to be in safe conditions.
Then i ran a nonlinear static analysis to see if some nonlinearities influenced the linear solution but the nonlinear analysis failed to converge at about half the total load.
Is this meaning that some nonlinear buckling occur at that level of load or may be something other that cause the non-convergence?
I know that linear buckling analysis is less conservative than real life but i don't know if the safety factor of 1.6 is a sufficient margin.
The vertical sides are very slender so i'm expecting those to be the weakest point.
First i ran a linear buckling analysis and it gave me the first eigenvalue of 1.6 so i'm pretty confident to be in safe conditions.
Then i ran a nonlinear static analysis to see if some nonlinearities influenced the linear solution but the nonlinear analysis failed to converge at about half the total load.
Is this meaning that some nonlinear buckling occur at that level of load or may be something other that cause the non-convergence?
I know that linear buckling analysis is less conservative than real life but i don't know if the safety factor of 1.6 is a sufficient margin.