Neglecting geometric and material non-linearities, are post-buckling deformations necessarily within the nonlinear stress-strain regime? I am trying to see if buckling forces are a good gauge to be used for linear elasticity assumption, i.e. post-buckling, linear elasticity is not a valid assumption. I am assuming the material is linear elastic. 

I was told by a support engineer at COMSOL to run buckling analysis to see how much compression my structure handles before buckling to see if linear elasticity is a good assumption. I don't see the connection between buckling and elastic nonlinearity. A linear and/or nonlinear elastic material post-buckling will deform back to the original shape when unloaded. Is it correct to say buckling is irrelevant to material non-linearity?    

Similar questions and discussions