charliealphabravo
Structural
- May 7, 2003
- 796
My Canadian colleague is taking me to task for not being familiar with Johnston column buckling theory. After some poking around it looks like Johnston developed a tangent modulus theory to describe the inelastic buckling of columns. I also see a single reference to his name in my 1000 page university text. It's not something that I see very often but I think AISC uses a less conservative method of reduced modulus. Does anyone know any background on this and why one is used over the other when you are outside the elastic/Euler range?
Also just as a refresher, what are some design scenarios where inelastic column buckling modes are common?
TIA
Also just as a refresher, what are some design scenarios where inelastic column buckling modes are common?
TIA