Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels

Luge is an Olympic sport in which athletes ride feet-first on sleds down an ice-covered track. Competitors spring from the starting position and accelerate their sled by paddling with spiked gloves against the ice surface. Once the Luger leaves the starting section, their downhill motion is solely p...

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Main Author: Stell, Brandon
Format: Others
Published: DigitalCommons@CalPoly 2017
Subjects:
ice
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1793
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3068&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-CALPOLY-oai-digitalcommons.calpoly.edu-theses-30682021-08-20T05:02:27Z Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels Stell, Brandon Luge is an Olympic sport in which athletes ride feet-first on sleds down an ice-covered track. Competitors spring from the starting position and accelerate their sled by paddling with spiked gloves against the ice surface. Once the Luger leaves the starting section, their downhill motion is solely propelled by the effects of gravity. Athletes compete, one after the other, for the fastest time. Runs can differ by as little as a thousandth of a second, meaning that every minor sled adjustment, change of line choice, and shift of body position is critical. In the past, the sport of Luge has progressed through a series of steps involving trial and error, where changes to the sled and strategy rely more on intuition and race results, rather than in-depth, mathematical analysis. In an effort to try and improve track times for the US Olympic Luge team, a track and driver model is in development in order to simulate a sled going down the track. By doing this, the hope is to be able to pinpoint areas of possible improvement to the sled and see how adjustments can affect the optimum line down the track. A part of this model, which is the focus of the following paper, is the inclusion of an analysis to identify the frictional relationship between the ice surface and the steels of the sled. The model created of the ice-steel interaction was put in the form of a function file, which includes inputs of down force, ice temperature, sled velocity, and steel geometry. Creation of this model and completion of a set of parametric studies allowed for further understanding the interaction between the sled steels and ice surface, specifically applying to the sport of Luge. The model predicts for lower temperatures that at slower sled velocities the coefficient of friction is greater compared to faster sled velocities. This relationship inverts as the ice temperature moves closer to the melting temperature. A sharper steel edge radius was found to be beneficial in lowering the coefficient of friction at lower sled velocities. The sharp edge radius friction benefit decreases as the sled speed increases and is predicted to actually increase friction slightly compared to duller blades at greater velocities. A flat as possible rocker radius lowers friction at all sled velocities, as well as in banked turns where two contact patches are possible. On curves, the pressure on the steel is increased due to the effects of centripetal accelerations. A 1 g versus 5 g normal loading, experienced on the last turns of the track, increases the coefficient of friction on the blade, but also increases the allowable lateral force on the sled before side slip occurs. Understanding the relationships of these parameters, along with the information that may be gained from the driver model, may prove to be useful in choosing optimum sled characteristics and line choice. 2017-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1793 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3068&context=theses Master's Theses DigitalCommons@CalPoly luge friction thermal-fluid model ice sled Mechanical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic luge
friction
thermal-fluid model
ice
sled
Mechanical Engineering
spellingShingle luge
friction
thermal-fluid model
ice
sled
Mechanical Engineering
Stell, Brandon
Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
description Luge is an Olympic sport in which athletes ride feet-first on sleds down an ice-covered track. Competitors spring from the starting position and accelerate their sled by paddling with spiked gloves against the ice surface. Once the Luger leaves the starting section, their downhill motion is solely propelled by the effects of gravity. Athletes compete, one after the other, for the fastest time. Runs can differ by as little as a thousandth of a second, meaning that every minor sled adjustment, change of line choice, and shift of body position is critical. In the past, the sport of Luge has progressed through a series of steps involving trial and error, where changes to the sled and strategy rely more on intuition and race results, rather than in-depth, mathematical analysis. In an effort to try and improve track times for the US Olympic Luge team, a track and driver model is in development in order to simulate a sled going down the track. By doing this, the hope is to be able to pinpoint areas of possible improvement to the sled and see how adjustments can affect the optimum line down the track. A part of this model, which is the focus of the following paper, is the inclusion of an analysis to identify the frictional relationship between the ice surface and the steels of the sled. The model created of the ice-steel interaction was put in the form of a function file, which includes inputs of down force, ice temperature, sled velocity, and steel geometry. Creation of this model and completion of a set of parametric studies allowed for further understanding the interaction between the sled steels and ice surface, specifically applying to the sport of Luge. The model predicts for lower temperatures that at slower sled velocities the coefficient of friction is greater compared to faster sled velocities. This relationship inverts as the ice temperature moves closer to the melting temperature. A sharper steel edge radius was found to be beneficial in lowering the coefficient of friction at lower sled velocities. The sharp edge radius friction benefit decreases as the sled speed increases and is predicted to actually increase friction slightly compared to duller blades at greater velocities. A flat as possible rocker radius lowers friction at all sled velocities, as well as in banked turns where two contact patches are possible. On curves, the pressure on the steel is increased due to the effects of centripetal accelerations. A 1 g versus 5 g normal loading, experienced on the last turns of the track, increases the coefficient of friction on the blade, but also increases the allowable lateral force on the sled before side slip occurs. Understanding the relationships of these parameters, along with the information that may be gained from the driver model, may prove to be useful in choosing optimum sled characteristics and line choice.
author Stell, Brandon
author_facet Stell, Brandon
author_sort Stell, Brandon
title Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
title_short Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
title_full Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
title_fullStr Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
title_full_unstemmed Thermal-Fluid Dynamic Model of Luge Steels
title_sort thermal-fluid dynamic model of luge steels
publisher DigitalCommons@CalPoly
publishDate 2017
url https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1793
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3068&context=theses
work_keys_str_mv AT stellbrandon thermalfluiddynamicmodeloflugesteels
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