Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.

The interference-fit joint is widely used in machine design to connect two cylindrical machine elements. Its popularity comes from the simplicity of the assembly and the low cost of the production process. Even so, no study has examined the boundary non-linearities in the assembly of these joints. M...

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Main Author: Shoukr, Shoukry Latif.
Other Authors: Kamel, H.A
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184928
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1849282015-10-23T04:30:29Z Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies. Shoukr, Shoukry Latif. Kamel, H.A DaDeppo, D.A. Richards, R.M. Wirsching, P.H. Chandra, A. Joints (Engineering) -- Fatigue -- Mathematical models Torsion Rolling-mill machinery Structural design The interference-fit joint is widely used in machine design to connect two cylindrical machine elements. Its popularity comes from the simplicity of the assembly and the low cost of the production process. Even so, no study has examined the boundary non-linearities in the assembly of these joints. Moreover, the contact stresses and the stress concentration factors in interference-fit joints under torsional loads have not yet been examined in detail. In addition, the interface stresses and stress concentration factors in interference-fit joints subjected to bending loads have not been approached theoretically before. The sugar-mill roller is one of the oldest and most important examples of the interference-fit joints. The frequent fatigue failure of the sugar-mill rollers under reversed bending causes costly emergency line-shut downs. The versatility of the finite element method and the capability of the point-matching technique in handling contact problems have been combined, in the present work, to produce a surface-matching technique. It has been found that the complete-cohesion contact assumption may be acceptable for coefficients of friction ≥ 0.2, which is the case for most of the normally machined surfaces. An approach combining the semi-inverse displacement finite element method and the surface-matching technique has been developed to perform the torsional analysis. It has been found that the governing non-dimensional quantities are the ratio of the cohesion-length to the interface-length and the coefficient of friction divided by the load-level. The load-level is the ratio between the angle of twist of the shaft per unit length when the torque acts on the shaft alone and the amount of the diametral interference divided by the shaft diameter. A finite element model, using 8-noded solid elements together with linear interface elements, has been employed to locate the cohesion and slippage-zones in the sugar-mill roller under bending. The contact pressure increases along the compression side and decreases along the tension side. On the contrary, the interface shear decreases along the compression side due to bending and increases along the tension side. Subsequently, a larger slippage-length has been detected along the tension side. 1989 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184928 703441446 9013184 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Joints (Engineering) -- Fatigue -- Mathematical models
Torsion
Rolling-mill machinery Structural design
spellingShingle Joints (Engineering) -- Fatigue -- Mathematical models
Torsion
Rolling-mill machinery Structural design
Shoukr, Shoukry Latif.
Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
description The interference-fit joint is widely used in machine design to connect two cylindrical machine elements. Its popularity comes from the simplicity of the assembly and the low cost of the production process. Even so, no study has examined the boundary non-linearities in the assembly of these joints. Moreover, the contact stresses and the stress concentration factors in interference-fit joints under torsional loads have not yet been examined in detail. In addition, the interface stresses and stress concentration factors in interference-fit joints subjected to bending loads have not been approached theoretically before. The sugar-mill roller is one of the oldest and most important examples of the interference-fit joints. The frequent fatigue failure of the sugar-mill rollers under reversed bending causes costly emergency line-shut downs. The versatility of the finite element method and the capability of the point-matching technique in handling contact problems have been combined, in the present work, to produce a surface-matching technique. It has been found that the complete-cohesion contact assumption may be acceptable for coefficients of friction ≥ 0.2, which is the case for most of the normally machined surfaces. An approach combining the semi-inverse displacement finite element method and the surface-matching technique has been developed to perform the torsional analysis. It has been found that the governing non-dimensional quantities are the ratio of the cohesion-length to the interface-length and the coefficient of friction divided by the load-level. The load-level is the ratio between the angle of twist of the shaft per unit length when the torque acts on the shaft alone and the amount of the diametral interference divided by the shaft diameter. A finite element model, using 8-noded solid elements together with linear interface elements, has been employed to locate the cohesion and slippage-zones in the sugar-mill roller under bending. The contact pressure increases along the compression side and decreases along the tension side. On the contrary, the interface shear decreases along the compression side due to bending and increases along the tension side. Subsequently, a larger slippage-length has been detected along the tension side.
author2 Kamel, H.A
author_facet Kamel, H.A
Shoukr, Shoukry Latif.
author Shoukr, Shoukry Latif.
author_sort Shoukr, Shoukry Latif.
title Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
title_short Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
title_full Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
title_fullStr Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
title_full_unstemmed Contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
title_sort contact stresses in interference-fit joints with application to sugar-mill roller assemblies.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1989
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184928
work_keys_str_mv AT shoukrshoukrylatif contactstressesininterferencefitjointswithapplicationtosugarmillrollerassemblies
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