tugni925
Mechanical
- Sep 14, 2020
- 107
When doing a nonlinear buckling analysis (where you have geometric and material nonlinearities), why do nonlinear effects usually happen at lower loads compared to when doing a linear buckling analysis?
Edit: Trying to understand this comment: "Yes, i.e. in plate bending LBA will see a lot of "fake" buckling (since it cannot see membrane state), and it isn't there - so technically the nonlinear analysis in such case would give a better outcome than LBA.
In shells, that would be rare, and I would be careful - it is possible to "miss" buckling and calculate your model in an unstable equilibrium in FEA if you are not sure what to do.
All the best, and good luck!" from this video:
Edit: Trying to understand this comment: "Yes, i.e. in plate bending LBA will see a lot of "fake" buckling (since it cannot see membrane state), and it isn't there - so technically the nonlinear analysis in such case would give a better outcome than LBA.
In shells, that would be rare, and I would be careful - it is possible to "miss" buckling and calculate your model in an unstable equilibrium in FEA if you are not sure what to do.
All the best, and good luck!" from this video: