Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method

The economy of material conveyance by pipe conveyors is largely affected by high costs of a conveyor belt and the support system of a conveyor. Even though the operational properties of a conveyor belt are taken into consideration, destruction of the top cover layer and punctures of the whole belt o...

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Main Authors: Ľuboš Caban, Daniela Marasová, Ľubomír Ambriško
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UIKTEN 2019-08-01
Series:TEM Journal
Subjects:
FEM
Online Access:http://www.temjournal.com/content/83/TEMJournalAugust2019_775_781.pdf
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spelling doaj-6bdbe927951145a9bae7d6c98ae360292020-11-25T01:23:28ZengUIKTENTEM Journal2217-83092217-83332019-08-018377578110.18421/TEM83-11Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element MethodĽuboš CabanDaniela MarasováĽubomír AmbriškoThe economy of material conveyance by pipe conveyors is largely affected by high costs of a conveyor belt and the support system of a conveyor. Even though the operational properties of a conveyor belt are taken into consideration, destruction of the top cover layer and punctures of the whole belt occur rather frequently. The most frequent cause of such damage to a conveyor belt is the impact load at critical sections of the transportation process. Such critical sections, where approximately 60 % of all the damage occurs, include chutes and filling stations. These sections are exposed to the elastic and plastic impact at the moment when the material of a certain weight falls down from a certain height (the maximum allowable impact height is 2.0-2.5 m). The magnitude and the direction of the impact force depend on the structural design of the chute and on the type of the support system. The present article deals with the application of the Finite Element Method (FEM) within the study of the dynamic effects developed at the impact of a load onto the impact bar.http://www.temjournal.com/content/83/TEMJournalAugust2019_775_781.pdfMathematical modellingFEMimpact barsbreakdown resistance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ľuboš Caban
Daniela Marasová
Ľubomír Ambriško
spellingShingle Ľuboš Caban
Daniela Marasová
Ľubomír Ambriško
Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
TEM Journal
Mathematical modelling
FEM
impact bars
breakdown resistance
author_facet Ľuboš Caban
Daniela Marasová
Ľubomír Ambriško
author_sort Ľuboš Caban
title Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
title_short Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
title_full Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
title_fullStr Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
title_full_unstemmed Methodology of the Impact Process Applying the Finite Element Method
title_sort methodology of the impact process applying the finite element method
publisher UIKTEN
series TEM Journal
issn 2217-8309
2217-8333
publishDate 2019-08-01
description The economy of material conveyance by pipe conveyors is largely affected by high costs of a conveyor belt and the support system of a conveyor. Even though the operational properties of a conveyor belt are taken into consideration, destruction of the top cover layer and punctures of the whole belt occur rather frequently. The most frequent cause of such damage to a conveyor belt is the impact load at critical sections of the transportation process. Such critical sections, where approximately 60 % of all the damage occurs, include chutes and filling stations. These sections are exposed to the elastic and plastic impact at the moment when the material of a certain weight falls down from a certain height (the maximum allowable impact height is 2.0-2.5 m). The magnitude and the direction of the impact force depend on the structural design of the chute and on the type of the support system. The present article deals with the application of the Finite Element Method (FEM) within the study of the dynamic effects developed at the impact of a load onto the impact bar.
topic Mathematical modelling
FEM
impact bars
breakdown resistance
url http://www.temjournal.com/content/83/TEMJournalAugust2019_775_781.pdf
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