1. Introduction
Columns are elements of the structures in various engineering fields that are subjected to external compressive loads. Long and slender columns have been erected for highways, bridges, offshore facilities, plant structures, etc. In the design of slender mega-columns, self-weight effects are important and must be included in buckling analysis. Such columns are also referred to as heavy columns [
1,
2]. Tapered members behave differently than uniform members because their variable cross-sections create effective coupling between internal forces and efficient stress distributions [
3]. Based on their space utilization, esthetics, safety, optimization, and economic benefits, tapered members are commonly used in engineering practice. Because a tapered member is controlled by its cross-sectional shape and column volume, which affect structural behaviors, various shapes of cross-section are frequently used in practical engineering. Over the past few decade, many efforts have been made to improve structural analyses, including column analysis based on the topics described above.
A short literature review of these topics is provided below. Wang and Drachman [
1] investigated the self-weight buckling of a cantilever heavy column with an end load based on a second-order differential equation in terms of the arc length of the buckled column. Interestingly, they applied an inverted cantilever column, which is a column hanging from its fixed end that is subjected to an upward end load. Greenhill [
4] studied the maximum stable column lengths (i.e., buckling lengths) of heavy columns such as mast poles. As indicated by the title of the paper, column buckling length was compared to the maximum height at which trees considered as cantilever columns could grow. Since then, small amounts of impactful research have been performed on the buckling analysis of heavy columns: Grishcoff [
5] used the infinite series to study the buckling loads of cantilever columns by combining the effects of self-weight and axial loading; Wang and Ang [
6] derived buckling load equations for a heavy column subjected to an axial compressive load and restrained by internal supports. Chai and Wang [
7] determined the minimum critical buckling load of self-weighted heavy columns under various end conditions using the differential transformation technique. Duan and Wang [
2] derived the exact buckling loads of heavy columns under various end conditions in terms of generalized hypergeometric functions. Lee and Lee [
8] studied the buckling of a prismatic heavy column under various end conditions, where the buckling length of the column was calculated by considering only its self-weight (without any axial compressive load). Regarding the optimization of heavy columns, tall columns with variable cross-sections and constant volumes were investigated by Keller and Niordson [
9], Atanackovic and Glavardanov [
10], and Sadiku [
11].
For tapered beam/column analysis, various taper functions [
3,
12,
13] along the column axis, including linear, parabolic, sinusoidal, and exponential functions, have been considered. The effects of various cross-sectional shapes [
14,
15], including rectangular, circular, elliptical, and regular polygons, on the optimization of column buckling have been examined. Additionally, the initial imperfection affecting column behavior was discussed in the open literature [
16,
17]. The stability of standing heavy column with the intermediate supports, i.e., laterally braced column, was discussed by Wang [
18].
Despite the considerable works discussed above, no buckling solutions have been presented in the open literature with a focus on tapered heavy columns and self-weight with regular polygon cross-sections and constant volumes. This study focused on the buckling loads and buckling self-weights of columns under various end conditions. Based on the small deflection theory, a differential equation is derived from the equilibrium equations of the buckled column elements. A direct integral method is developed for integrating the governing equation and the determinant search method is adopted for determining eigenvalues. The predicted results for the buckling load and buckling self-weight are compared to reference values. Numerical results for the buckling load, buckling length, and buckling stress with corresponding mode shapes are presented.
2. Mathematical Formulation
Figure 1a presents an ideal and linear elastic column of span length
placed in a Cartesian coordinate
system originating at the toe end
. The toe end
(
) is either hinged or clamped and the head end
(
) is either free, hinged, or clamped. Therefore, five end condition combinations are possible: “hinged-hinged (H-H)”, “hinged-clamped (H-C)”, “clamped-free (C-F)”, “clamped-hinged (C-H)”, and “clamped-clamped (C-C)”, where the former end represents the toe end and the latter end represents the head end. Columns with H-F end condition were not considered in this study because they are unstable in the structural mechanism from an engineering point of view.
The target columns are linearly tapered with cross-sectional shapes of -sided regular polygons with circumradii measured from the centroid to a vertex at any coordinate . At the toe end , is represented as . At the head end , is represented as . The column volume is always constant. The cross-sectional area and second moment of the plane area at are denoted as and , respectively. In the buckling analysis in this study, self-weight effects were included. Such effects are a major concern in the analysis of heavy columns. The internal self-weight intensity, which is the downward self-weight per unit of axial length induced by column mass and gravity, is represented as , where is the weight density of the column material. The column is subjected to an external compressive load at the head end and its own self-weight . When increases and reaches the buckling load , the column with a buckling length buckles and forms the buckled-mode shape represented by the solid curve. After column buckling, the internal forces of the axial force , shear force , and bending moment are applied to the buckled column at .
To express the taper function of
at
mathematically, the taper ratio
, which is defined as the ratio of the head radius
to the toe radius
is introduced.
The linear taper function, which is one of the most practical functions in field engineering, of
is expressed in terms of
as follows:
where
.
By using
in Equation (2), the variable functions of
and
for the
-sided regular polygon at
can be obtained as follows [
19]:
where
and
are
where
is the integer side number and
for the circular cross-section.
The column volume
is determined as
where
is
Note that the length in Equation (7) is the buckling length of the column subjected to an external buckling load and self-weight .
Based on Equation (7), the circumradius
can be obtained in terms of
as
By using Equations (3) and (4) with Equation (9),
and
can be obtained in terms of
as
Figure 1b presents a free-body diagram with an infinitesimal length
for a buckled column element, which is in an equilibrium state based on the internal forces
,
,
and self-weight
. By setting
,
, and
, the three equilibrium equations can be established as
Differentiating Equation (14) yields the second derivative
as
Substituting Equations (12) and (13) into Equation (15) yields
The self-weight intensity
at
caused by the
value of the column material is given by
Considering
and
in Equation (17), the axial force
at
is obtained as
where the term
is equal to the total column weight
.
The bending moment
is given by the relationship between load and deformation based on the small deflection theory [
19] as
Differentiating Equation (19) twice yields
Substituting Equations (17), (18), and (20) into Equation (16) yields
From Equation (11), the first and second derivatives of
are determined, respectively:
Substituting Equation (22a,b) into Equation (21) yields
To facilitate numerical analysis and obtain the most general results for this class of problems, the following system parameters are cast into non-dimensional forms:
where
are non-dimensional Cartesian coordinates,
is the buckling load parameter, and
is the self-weight parameter.
By using Equations (24)–(27), Equation (23) in dimensional units can be transformed into the non-dimensional differential Equation (28), which governs the buckled shape of the heavy column as
where
and
. The eigenvalues of
in Equation (28) are conjugated with each other. This means that for a given
value, the eigenvalue
is unique, and vice versa.
Now, consider the boundary conditions in Equation (28). At the top free end (
),
in Equation (19) and
in Equation (14) are both equal to zero. Therefore, the non-dimensional boundary conditions of the head free end
are obtained as follows:
For the toe and head hinged ends (
and
),
and
are both zero and the non-dimensional boundary conditions at
and
are obtained:
For the toe and head clamped ends (
and
),
and
are both zero and the non-dimensional boundary conditions at
and
are obtained:
By using the differential equation in Equation (28) subjected to the selected boundary conditions in Equations (29)–(31), the conjugate eigenvalues of can be computed using appropriate numerical solution methods for a given set of column parameters for the end conditions ( and ).
It is possible for a column to buckle under its self-weight
, even if no external load
is applied. The buckling self-weight parameter
for
was introduced using Equation (27) and can be formulated as
where
is the self-weight buckling length for which the column buckles under self-weight alone. Setting
and using
instead of
in Equation (28) yields the following equation:
where the buckling self-weight parameter
is the eigenvalue in the differential equation of Equation (33).
After calculating the conjugate eigenvalues
from Equation (28) for a given set of
,
, and
, the buckling length
is calculated using Equation (26) or Equation (27), and the buckling stress
at
is obtained as
where
and
in Equation (35) are given by Equations (10) and (18), respectively. In particular, the self-weight buckling length
and self-weight buckling stress
caused only by the self-weight
with
are obtained using Equations (36) and (37), respectively.
4. Results and Discussion
Numerical experiments on the effects of column parameters on the conjugate eigenvalues of
in Equation (28) and the eigenvalue
in Equation (33) with their corresponding mode shapes
were performed. For validation purposes, the buckling loads
and buckling self-weight parameters
in this study and various references [
2,
6,
8,
22] are compared in
Table 1 and
Table 2, respectively. First, the
values for a concrete column with
m
3,
GPa, and
(i.e., without self-weight, with varying end conditions, a side number
, and taper ratio
) are compared. The results of this study and those presented by Riley [
22] are in good agreement (0.3% error). Second, the buckling self-weight parameters
for
(i.e., uniform column) in this study and previous studies [
2,
6,
8] with various end conditions are compared. Note that the parameters of
for the buckling self-weight parameter
have also been adopted in the literature [
2,
6]. If
, then the parameters are the same, regardless of
. The results of this study and the references [
6] agree well, and the results of this study and the references [
2,
8] are the same to within five significant figures. Thus, the analytical theories and numerical methods developed in this study are validated when considering all of the column parameters, including the end conditions,
, and
.
Table 3 shows the effects of the side number
on the buckling load parameter
with a conjugate eigenvalue of
= 1 and
for each end condition. As
increases,
decreases. One can see that an equilateral triangle
column is the strongest column with the largest
value for a given column volume. This is because the area is the same regardless of
in the same volume, but the circumradius
and the second moment of the plane area
depend on
and are greater from
to
(see the ratio of
in the last column of the table). The
value of the equilateral triangle column is
times larger than the circular column
for the H-H condition. The value of
depends heavily on the end conditions, as indicated by C-C column maximum and C-F column minimum. For the circular cross-section, the
value of the C-C column is
times larger than that of the C-F column.
Figure 3 presents
versus
curves for a conjugate eigenvalue of
and circular cross-section. Columns subjected to an external load
are in the stability domain under the
versus
curves (i.e.,
), meaning they are not buckled. As
increases,
increases, reaches a peak coordinate
marked with ▲, and then decreases. At the peak point of
of each curve, the taper ratio
is optimized, implying that the column with the optimized
has the maximum
. For example, for the C-H column, the column achieves the maximum
with an optimized
. One can see that the
values with
, excluding the C-F column, are nearly identical to the
values with the optimized
.
Figure 3 also highlights the stability region of
. For the C-F column, the columns with
are stable (i.e., not buckled), unless
. In contrast, the columns with
are unconditionally unstable (i.e., buckled), even if
, implying that the columns are buckled by the self-weight parameter
. For the C-C and C-H columns, the lower limit of stability for
is
(see marks of
) and the upper limit of
does not appear until
. For the H-C and H-H columns, the lower limits of stability for
are
and
(see marks of
), respectively, and upper limits of
do not appear until
1.
Figure 4 presents a graphical chart of the conjugated eigenvalues of the buckling load parameter and self-weight parameter
for a circular cross-section with
. In the governing differential equation, namely, Equation (28), there are two conjugated eigenvalues of
that are unique. As
increases,
decreases.
is the largest at
when excluding the self-weight effect and the effect of
on
is significant. For example,
with
is 25.5% smaller than
with
(
; see marks of ●). Eventually,
becomes zero at
(i.e., the buckling self-weight parameter
). Therefore, the column with
buckles under the column self-weight alone, without any external load. In this figure, values of
marked by
are presented for a given set of column parameters.
Figure 5 presents the buckled mode shapes
for each end condition with a circular cross-section,
, and
. In this figure, the buckling load parameters
shown in
Table 3 and the positions
of the maximum deflection for each end condition are also presented. Note that the coordinate
of the deflection represents relative deflection, rather than absolute deflection. The buckling length parameter
for each end condition is the same, but the value of
heavily depends on the end condition. The location of the maximum deflection depends on the end condition. The location of the maximum deflection of a column like a utility pole may be controlled by guywires to prevent unexpected buckling stemming from undesirable column imperfections.
Table 4 shows the effects of the side number
on the buckling self-weight parameter
with
for each end condition. As
increases,
decreases. An equilateral triangle
column is the strongest column with the largest
value for a given column volume. The
value of the triangle column is
times larger than that of the circular column
for the H-H condition. The value of
depends heavily on the end conditions, as indicated by the C-C column maximum and C-F column minimum. For the circular cross-section, the
value of the C-C column is
times greater than that of the C-F column. Therefore, selecting proper end conditions is one of the most important design criteria for heavy column design, as discussed previously regarding
Table 3.
Figure 6 presents
versus
curves for the circular cross-section, where the values of
with
listed in
Figure 4 are also represented as
marks. Columns with the self-weight parameter
are in the stability domain under the
versus
curves (i.e.,
) and are not buckled by self-weight. As
increases,
increases, reaches a peak at the coordinates
marked with ▲, and then decreases. At the peak point of
on each curve, the taper ratio
is optimized to avoid buckling under self-weight, implying that the column with the optimized
has the maximum
. For example, for a H-C column, the column achieves the maximum
with an optimized
.
Figure 7 presents the buckling stresses
in dimensional units for columns subjected to (a) self-weight without an external load (
) and (b) an external buckling load of
MN, where the buckling column length
, stress
at the column toe
, and stress
at the pile head
are presented. The column parameters considered are a circular cross-section,
,
m
3,
GPa, and
kN/m
3 for a concrete material. In the case of (a) self-weight,
decreases along the column axis and
is maximized as
at
, which is the expected behavior. For the buckling column length
, the C-C column is the longest and the C-F column is the shortest, which is the expected behavior. Considering the ultimate stress of
MPa for the concrete material,
values between 0.825 and 1.249 MPa are relatively small compared to
, meaning heavy column ruptures are caused by buckling, rather than fracturing. In the case of (b), the external load of
MN,
increases along the column axis, where
is minimized as
and maximized as
because the column is subjected to an external load and the column area decreases (i.e.,
). Additionally, the buckling length
of the C-C column is the largest and that of the C-F column is the smallest. Even when an external load is applied to the column, the column ruptures as a result of buckling, rather than fracturing, just as in the case of self-weight buckling.
Table 5 and
Table 6 summarizes the tallest non-buckling column lengths of
provided in
Figure 7. These tables also include numerical results for a steel heavy column with a square cross-section,
GPa, and
kN/m
3, with the other parameters kept constant. The buckling behavior of steel columns is similar to that of concrete columns. It is noteworthy that the self-eight buckling length
(see Equation (36)) and buckling length
(see Equation (34)) of the steel column do not increase significantly beyond those of the concrete column, despite the Young’s moduli of
GPa for the concrete column and
GPa for the steel column. Note that under the same column parameters given above, if the length of a particular column is shorter than the tallest length
or
shown in
Table 5 and
Table 6, the column is safe from column buckling. For example, the H-H column with a specific column length of 10 m
will not be buckling. The corresponding circumradii of the column are
m and
m (
and column length
10 m), which are practical in real engineering systems. The column stress
at the toe end is computed as
MPa
, and therefore this column is safe from self-weight buckling.