Abstract

Main concern of the paper is to illustrate the generic application of the optimal control method in the analysis of a constrained buckling problem and its simple and elegant formulation when compared to other techniques. Thus, an optimal control methodology is adopted to investigate the buckling behavior of thin elastic structures under the presence of unilateral constraints. We particularly explore the post-buckling response of a constant or variable length elastica constrained by rigid walls.The equivalence between the calculus of variations and the optimal control is first demonstrated, with a main focus on the post-buckling behavior of a constant length elastica which is constrained by horizontal walls. The gradual construction of the constrained buckling problem as an optimal control problem from its equivalent Lagrangian form clearly shows its advantage when compared to the calculus of variations. The necessary optimality conditions, which constitute the Pontryagin’s minimum or maximum principle, are also derived by considering a direct adjoining approach. The solution of the optimal control problem is then performed by applying a direct method.Validation of the methodology is first achieved by reproducing examples available in the literature. Then the effects of factors, such as the geometry of the walls and the variability in the bending stiffness of the elastica, on its buckling response are analyzed. These constrained buckling problems are investigated for the first time, while through them it is also readily shown that the presence of geometric or material nonlinearity does not introduce any essential complexity in the buckling analysis when the optimal control methodology is adopted.

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