Free Steel Buckling Calculator — Column & Plate

Check steel buckling across all major modes — flexural (Euler) buckling of columns, torsional and flexural-torsional buckling of singly-symmetric sections, lateral-torsional buckling (LTB) of beams, and local buckling of plates. Covers AISC 360-22 Sections E, F, and B4, AS 4100 Sections 5 and 6, EN 1993-1-1 Section 6.3, and CSA S16 Sections 13 and 14.

Buckling Modes

Mode Sections Affected AISC 360 AS 4100 EN 1993-1-1 CSA S16
Flexural (Euler) All columns, compression members E3 Cl 6.3 Cl 6.3.1 Cl 13.3
Torsional Cruciform, thin-walled closed E4 Cl 6.4 Cl 6.3.1.4 Cl 13.3.2
Flexural-torsional Single angles, T-sections, channels E4 Cl 6.4 Cl 6.3.1.4 Cl 13.3.2
Lateral-torsional (LTB) Beams, unbraced compression flange F2 Cl 5.6 Cl 6.3.2.2 Cl 13.6
Local (flange/web) All sections with slender elements B4 Cl 5.2 Table 5.2 Cl 11.2

Key Equations

Euler buckling (AISC 360-22 Eq E3-3): Fe = π²E / (KL/r)²

Inelastic buckling (AISC 360-22 Eq E3-2): When KL/r ≤ 4.71√(E/Fy): Fcr = (0.658^(Fy/Fe)) × Fy When KL/r > 4.71√(E/Fy): Fcr = 0.877 × Fe

LTB moment (AISC 360-22 Eq F2-3): Mn = Fcr × Sx, where Fcr = Cb × π² × E / (Lb/rts)² × √(1 + 0.078 × Jc/(Sx×ho) × (Lb/rts)²)

Design Guidance

Key Design Parameters

When performing structural steel design calculations, the following parameters govern the design:

Design Procedure

  1. Establish design criteria: code edition, material grade, design method (LRFD/ASD)
  2. Determine loads and applicable load combinations
  3. Analyze structure for internal forces (axial, shear, moment, torsion)
  4. Check member strength for all applicable limit states
  5. Verify serviceability criteria (deflection, drift, vibration)
  6. Detail connections to transfer calculated forces

Worked Example

Problem: Design a structural element for the following conditions:

Span/Height: 15 ft | Load: 50 kips (factored) | Section: W12×65 (A992, Fy=50 ksi) | Code: AISC 360-22 LRFD

Solution:

Result: Section is adequate if φcPn ≥ Pu (50 kips).

Frequently Asked Questions

What design codes does this calculator support?

This calculator supports AISC 360-22 (US LRFD and ASD), EN 1993-1-1 (Eurocode 3), AS 4100 (Australia), and CSA S16 (Canada). Each code edition is verified against the respective design standard. Select your governing code in the calculator interface before entering loads.

How accurate are the results from this calculator?

Results are verified against published design examples and textbook solutions. The calculation engine uses the exact code provisions from the applicable standard. Always verify critical results independently and have designs reviewed by a licensed Professional Engineer. Results are preliminary until independently verified.

Can I save and export my calculations?

Registered users can save calculations to their account for later reference. Currently 10 calculations per hour and 50 per day are available on the free tier. Pro subscription ($19.99/month) increases limits to 500 calculations per month with PDF export capability.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Euler buckling and inelastic buckling? Euler buckling describes elastic buckling of a perfectly straight column, valid when the critical stress remains below the proportional limit. Inelastic buckling accounts for material nonlinearity (residual stresses, partial yielding), which reduces capacity below the Euler curve for intermediate slenderness ratios. The transition occurs at KL/r ≈ 4.71√(E/Fy) per AISC 360.

What is flexural-torsional buckling and when does it govern? Flexural-torsional buckling is a coupled mode involving simultaneous bending and twisting, occurring in singly-symmetric sections (channels, T-sections, single angles, double angles with a gap). Unlike doubly-symmetric sections (W-shapes with equal flanges) where pure flexural buckling governs, single angles can have FTB capacities up to 40% lower than flexural buckling.

How does lateral-torsional buckling differ from column buckling? LTB is a beam instability where the compression flange buckles laterally while the cross-section twists, reducing flexural capacity. Column buckling (flexural) is a compression member instability. LTB depends on unbraced length (Lb), section torsional properties (J, Cw), and moment gradient (Cb). Column buckling depends on KL/r, which is purely a section radius of gyration and effective length.

What is the local buckling limit for flange and web elements? AISC 360-22 Table B4.1b defines width-to-thickness limits for compression elements. Flanges: λ_p = 0.38√(E/Fy) (compact limit), λ_r = 1.0√(E/Fy) (slender limit). Webs: λ_p = 3.76√(E/Fy) (compact), λ_r = 5.70√(E/Fy) (slender). Beyond λ_r, effective width concepts are required (Section E7 for columns, F5 for beams).

Is this buckling calculator free? Yes, completely free with unlimited calculations.

Disclaimer (educational use only)

This page is provided for general technical information and educational use only. It does not constitute professional engineering advice. All structural designs must be verified by a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) or Structural Engineer (SE). The site operator disclaims liability for any loss or damage arising from the use of this page.