Torsional Buckling of an Extended Twisted Cylindrical Rod Under One-Sided Constraint
Author(s) -
William O. Williams,
P. R. Paslay
Publication year - 1965
Publication title -
journal of applied mechanics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.69
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1528-9036
pISSN - 0021-8936
DOI - 10.1115/1.3627253
Subject(s) - buckling , infinitesimal , position (finance) , plane (geometry) , physics , mechanics , classical mechanics , constraint (computer aided design) , field (mathematics) , geometry , mathematics , mathematical analysis , finance , pure mathematics , economics , thermodynamics
The problem considered is that of the determination of stability criteria for an extended tvisted cylindrical rod resting on a rigid plane inclined vlth respect to a gravity field. It vas assumed that the tensile strain of the rod vas no larger than that compatible with infinitesimal elasticity theory but that the torsion might be finite. The energy theory of buckling vas used. Prior to consideration of the specific problem, a formulation of the strain energy of an arbitrarily displaced cylindrical rod was made. It vas assumed for this purpose that the rod suffers no lateral deforma¬ tion and that sections of the rod initially plane and perpendicular to the center line remain plane and perpendicular to the tangent of the center line curve. The potential energy contributed by external loadings (the gravity force, axial tensile force and axial moment) vas then computed and added to the strain energy expression above. An equilibrium config¬ uration vas then assumed and the total energy variation for perturbations of this configuration considered. The variation of energy for arbitrary displacements vas found to be positive to first order effects so that the configuration is stable in the classical sense. Consideration of second order effects revealed that Instability may develop for sufficiently large displacements from the equilibrium configuration. The conditions under vhich such instabilities can occur vere formulated and reduced to a simple sequence of calculations for application.
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