Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats
To assist in developing a database of wood material properties for the finite element modeling of wood baseball bats, Charpy impact testing at strain rates comparable to those that a wood bat experiences during a bat/ball collision is completed to characterize the failure energy and strain-to-failur...
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doaj-e72eef3fd9524d328386505998aea6212020-11-24T23:14:53ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172018-11-01811225610.3390/app8112256app8112256Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball BatsJoshua Fortin-Smith0James Sherwood1Patrick Drane2David Kretschmann3Baseball Research Center, Mechanical Engineering, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 1 University Avenue, Lowell, MA 01854, USABaseball Research Center, Mechanical Engineering, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 1 University Avenue, Lowell, MA 01854, USABaseball Research Center, Mechanical Engineering, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 1 University Avenue, Lowell, MA 01854, USAU.S. Forest Products Laboratory, US Forest Service, 1 Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53726, USATo assist in developing a database of wood material properties for the finite element modeling of wood baseball bats, Charpy impact testing at strain rates comparable to those that a wood bat experiences during a bat/ball collision is completed to characterize the failure energy and strain-to-failure as a function of density and slope-of-grain (SoG) for northern white ash (Fraxinus americana) and sugar maple (Acer saccharum). Un-notched Charpy test specimens made from billets of ash and maple that span the range of densities and SoGs that are approved for making professional baseball bats are impacted on either the edge grain or face grain. High-speed video is used to capture each test event and image analysis techniques are used to determine the strain-to-failure for each test. Strain-to-failure as a function of density relations are derived and these relations are used to calculate inputs to the *MAT_WOOD (Material Model 143) and *MAT_EROSION material options in LS-DYNA for the subsequent finite element modeling of the ash and maple Charpy Impact tests and for a maple bat/ball impact. The Charpy test data show that the strain-to-failure increases with increasing density for maple but the strain-to-failure remains essentially constant over the range of densities considered in this study for ash. The flat response of the ash data suggests that ash-bat durability is less sensitive to wood density than maple-bat durability. The available SoG results suggest that density has a greater effect on the impact failure properties of the wood than SoG. However, once the wood begins to fracture, SoG plays a large role in the direction of crack propagation of the wood, thereby determining if the shape of the pieces breaking away from the bat are fairly blunt or spear-like. The finite element modeling results for the Charpy and bat/ball impacts show good correlation with the experimental data.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/8/11/2256baseballbatCharpyfinite elementimpactwood |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Joshua Fortin-Smith James Sherwood Patrick Drane David Kretschmann |
spellingShingle |
Joshua Fortin-Smith James Sherwood Patrick Drane David Kretschmann Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats Applied Sciences baseball bat Charpy finite element impact wood |
author_facet |
Joshua Fortin-Smith James Sherwood Patrick Drane David Kretschmann |
author_sort |
Joshua Fortin-Smith |
title |
Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats |
title_short |
Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats |
title_full |
Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats |
title_fullStr |
Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats |
title_full_unstemmed |
Characterization of Maple and Ash Material Properties for the Finite Element Modeling of Wood Baseball Bats |
title_sort |
characterization of maple and ash material properties for the finite element modeling of wood baseball bats |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Applied Sciences |
issn |
2076-3417 |
publishDate |
2018-11-01 |
description |
To assist in developing a database of wood material properties for the finite element modeling of wood baseball bats, Charpy impact testing at strain rates comparable to those that a wood bat experiences during a bat/ball collision is completed to characterize the failure energy and strain-to-failure as a function of density and slope-of-grain (SoG) for northern white ash (Fraxinus americana) and sugar maple (Acer saccharum). Un-notched Charpy test specimens made from billets of ash and maple that span the range of densities and SoGs that are approved for making professional baseball bats are impacted on either the edge grain or face grain. High-speed video is used to capture each test event and image analysis techniques are used to determine the strain-to-failure for each test. Strain-to-failure as a function of density relations are derived and these relations are used to calculate inputs to the *MAT_WOOD (Material Model 143) and *MAT_EROSION material options in LS-DYNA for the subsequent finite element modeling of the ash and maple Charpy Impact tests and for a maple bat/ball impact. The Charpy test data show that the strain-to-failure increases with increasing density for maple but the strain-to-failure remains essentially constant over the range of densities considered in this study for ash. The flat response of the ash data suggests that ash-bat durability is less sensitive to wood density than maple-bat durability. The available SoG results suggest that density has a greater effect on the impact failure properties of the wood than SoG. However, once the wood begins to fracture, SoG plays a large role in the direction of crack propagation of the wood, thereby determining if the shape of the pieces breaking away from the bat are fairly blunt or spear-like. The finite element modeling results for the Charpy and bat/ball impacts show good correlation with the experimental data. |
topic |
baseball bat Charpy finite element impact wood |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/8/11/2256 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT joshuafortinsmith characterizationofmapleandashmaterialpropertiesforthefiniteelementmodelingofwoodbaseballbats AT jamessherwood characterizationofmapleandashmaterialpropertiesforthefiniteelementmodelingofwoodbaseballbats AT patrickdrane characterizationofmapleandashmaterialpropertiesforthefiniteelementmodelingofwoodbaseballbats AT davidkretschmann characterizationofmapleandashmaterialpropertiesforthefiniteelementmodelingofwoodbaseballbats |
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1725592971063066624 |