Monopole Towers are used for a variety of communication applications and are ideal for use
when zoning is difficult. They are the least intrusive and easiest communication towers to erect
making them one of the most popular tower types in the wireless communication industry.
Monopoles can also be designed as concealment poles: pine poles, flag poles, palm poles and
other stealth towers. Many uses include cellular monopoles, wireless internet monopoles,
homeland security monopoles, two-way monopoles, and wind tower monopoles.
Poles are of two general types, tapered polygonal poles and stepped pipe poles.
The tapered polygonal pole shown in Figure 1 is custom manufactured to exact diameters
required for the design. Each section is joined using telescoping lap joints.
Pipe poles are made from large diameter pipe sections and joined by external or internal flange
connections as shown in Fig. 2.
Poles have been used in the power transmission field since the 1960s. Prior to that, poles were
used almost exclusively for flags and for highway structures. In recent years, poles have become
popular for both electric transmission towers and for telecommunication structures.
There is currently no industry standard for the design of pole base plates. Some state highway
departments (New York) have developed their own methods, but no national standard exists. As
such, the designer is left to arrive at appropriate methods based upon classical structural
mechanics. While some testing has been done on smaller pole base plates used in highway
construction (usually poles between 25 and 50 centimeters in diameter), no testing has been done
on larger diameter pole base plates such as used in the telecommunication industry (poles 90 to
180 centimeters in diameter). Therefore, such design techniques may or may not be appropriate.
Recent finite element studies have indicated that current design practices used by pole
manufacturers may be under-designed by 20 to 30%.
Structural engineer faces the challenging job of designing and constructing telecommunication
towers to support all loads in open weather with high degree of reliability.
Tower is to be designed in such a way that the antennas can be placed at certain elevations.
Signal transmission should not be obstructed in any case. The structural properties of the tower
are very important as the property such as tower stiffness has a big influence on its performance
and structural response. Tubular towers can have either a round or a polygonal cross section.
Modern towers are tapered tubular tower with diameter increasing towards the base. Generally,
the idea is to increase the strength towards the base where high bending stresses are susceptible.
Also, it saves the material and thereby reducing the cost of the tower. Usually, monopole tower
has a large the ratio of height (H) to least horizontal dimension (D) that makes it a particularly
more slender and wind sensitive than any other structures. On the other hand, the thickness is
less than the radius of the tubular of shaft and hence the tower is more prone to buckling. The
height of the tower is a site-dependent parameter such that the signal transmission is not
obstructed. The design optimization for the least cost could favor tall towers in low wind areas
and shorter towers in high wind areas. Taller the tower, lesser will be the effect of harmful
radiation towards the living organisms.
ASTM 572 (density = 7800 kg/m3) is most commonly used material in towers. It is a high
strength, low alloy steel that finds its best application where there is need for more strength per
unit of weight. Less of this material is needed to fulfill given strength requirements than is
necessary with regular carbon steels. In addition, ASTM 572 is noted for its increased resistance
to atmospheric corrosion and can be successfully bent or shaped but requires more force than
plain carbon steel. It is commonly used in structural applications, heavy construction equipment,
building structures, heavy duty anchoring systems, truck frames, poles, liners, conveyors, boom
sections, structural steel shapes, and applications that require high strength per weight ratio.