Design and Analysis of Composite Parabolic Leaf Spring Under Fatigue Load Condition

Author(s):  
Priyadarshi Dutt ◽  
T. Babu ◽  
M. Murugan ◽  
P. Anbarasu ◽  
Bala Subramani
2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murathan Soner ◽  
Metin Guven ◽  
Nilay Guven ◽  
Tolga Erdogus ◽  
Mustafa Karaagac ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Junhong Zhang ◽  
Feiqi Long ◽  
Hongjie Jia ◽  
Jiewei Lin

Abstract Leaf springs play an important role in the handling stability and ride comfort of vehicle. End rubber gaskets are widely used to reduce the friction between leaves, but they also have considerable effect on the stiffness of the suspension assembly. The ride comfort may deteriorate with the stiffness of leaf spring changes. In this paper the influence of the end rubber gasket on the static stiffness performance of a parabolic leaf spring is studied. A finite element model of the leaf spring is developed and verified against the static stiffness test. Effects of the end rubber gasket parameters on the static stiffness of the leaf spring are analyzed based on an orthogonal experiment. The sensitivities of the five parameters are identified including the width, the length, the end thickness, the tail thickness and the distance to the end of the middle leaf. It is found that the contributions can be ranked in descending order as the tail thickness, the end thickness, the distance from end rubber gasket to the end of Leaf 2, and the width and length. The first two factors are considered of significant effects on the leaf spring stiffness. According to single-factor analysis, it is found that under the same load, as the tail thickness and the end thickness increase, the maximum deformation of the rubber gasket decreases, the stiffness of the rubber gasket increases, and the stiffness of the leaf spring increases, which provides a reference for the forward design of the end rubber gasket and the stiffness matching of leaf springs.


2018 ◽  
pp. 00-00
Author(s):  
Karthikeyan Marappan ◽  
Jenarthanan MP ◽  
Sree Krishna B

Author(s):  
M. M. Patunkar ◽  
D. R. Dolas

Leaf springs are one of the oldest suspension components they are still frequently used, especially in commercial vehicles. The past literature survey shows that leaf springs are designed as generalized force elements where the position, velocity and orientation of the axle mounting gives the reaction forces in the chassis attachment positions. Another part has to be focused, is the automobile industry has shown increased interest in the replacement of steel spring with composite leaf spring due to high strength to weight ratio. Therefore, analysis of the composite material becomes equally important to study the behavior of Composite Leaf Spring. The objective of this paper is to present modeling and analysis of composite mono leaf spring (GFRP) and compare its results. Modelling is done using Pro-E (Wild Fire) 5.0 and Analysis is carried out by using ANSYS 10.0 software for better understanding.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 5757-5764
Author(s):  
Pradip Kumar ◽  
Chhabi Ram Matawale

2011 ◽  
Vol 462-463 ◽  
pp. 419-424
Author(s):  
Fayyadh Nakhaie Ahmad Refngah ◽  
Shahrum Abdullah ◽  
Azman Jalar ◽  
L.B. Chua

It is compulsory to have a good fatigue life to a component that is heavily subjected to cyclic loading. One of the good examples is parabolic spring, which is one of the components in suspension system for large vehicles. It serves to absorb, store and release back the damping energy due to road irregularity, bump and holes. These activities involve a lot of camber deflection that caused by the tension and compression loads. In reality, the loading that subjected to parabolic spring is variable amplitude loading, but most of the manufacturer used constant amplitude (CA) loading for the fatigue test. The objective of this paper is to relate the simulation result with the microstructure behaviour of the leaf spring that failed due to fatigue. A full scale fatigue test was carried out until that parabolic spring meet failure. In order to investigate the fatigue life, CA signal was generated based on an actual fatigue test on the parabolic spring, and it was then analysed using the FEA-based fatigue simulation. A microstructure study was then performed for both fracture and non-fracture area. From the FEA-based simulation, it gave the prediction on damage that occurred at the critical area and also the prediction on the lowest cycle with respect to the FEA model. In the actual fatigue test, the failure was occurred at the centre part of the spring, which is at bolt join of assembly hole. The microstructure analysis showed that the grain at the fracture area indicated some different from the non-fracture area in term of size, phase and precipitation of carbon.


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