scholarly journals Analytical Modeling and Results Evaluation of Composite Open Web Steel Joists Behavior

2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 356-367
Author(s):  
Ali Farhan Hadeed ◽  
Laith Khalid Al-Hadithy ◽  
Riyadh J. Aziz

In this study, the analytic model (Azmi Model) had been considered for computation the load capacities of the composite open web steel joists and compared them with those obtained from experimental tests. The capacities of seven joists had been studied, each including one of the following variables (distribution of headed studs, connection degree of the connectors, inclination of the web, shape of the web, density of slab concrete, length of connectors).Theoretically, according to the Analytic model, the referenced joist of (45° web inclination , uniformly distributed ,over connected ,short headed studs) exhibited maximum load capacity of (18.45) ton, while the joist of (45° web inclination, uniformly distributed, under connected, short headed studs) exhibited minimum load capacity of (16.23) ton at yield point of bottom chord. Experimentally, the referenced joist exhibited maximum load capacity of (15.51) ton, while the joist of (34° web inclination, uniformly distributed, over connected, short headed studs) exhibited (12.49) ton load capacity. The load capacities values of the tested joists ranged between (67%-85%) of the predicted values according to the analytic model.

2013 ◽  
Vol 744 ◽  
pp. 383-387
Author(s):  
Jia Shi Wang ◽  
Zai Ke Li ◽  
Qi Bin Jiang ◽  
Wen Li Lv

The composite leaf spring for trailer truck is developed with weight reduction 60% relative to steel spring, which can be benefit to environment protection and energy saving. In this work, the composite leaf spring is designed and analyzed by finite element method. Then the experimental tests are conducted on the composite leaf spring fabricated by the hot molding process. The spring rate and the maximum load capacity are measured, which have a good agreement with the design results.


Mechanik ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 92 (11) ◽  
pp. 714-716
Author(s):  
Paweł Bałon ◽  
Adam Kochman ◽  
Edward Rejman ◽  
Bartłomiej Kiełbasa ◽  
Robert Smusz ◽  
...  

The paper presents the methodology for designing the drive shaft of the injection pump for diesel engines with cylinder numbers of 2, 3, 4, 6 and power from 2,5 kW to 52 kW per cylinder using the finite element method (FEM) and experimental research. The pump is the original solution of the authors. The shaft is the basic part of the pump with a complex structure. In order to assess the state of stress in the shaft, the analytical FEM was used and experimental tests were carried out, subjecting the shaft to twisting with the design torque resulting from the transferred power. Experimental research confirmed the results of numerical calculations and the correctness of the adopted solution. In order to evaluate the maximum load capacity of the shaft, destructive tests were carried out, charging it with increasing torque until visible plastic deformations occurred. This condition occurred at a time twice as high as the maximum anticipated moment in operation.


Lubricants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 47
Author(s):  
Federico Colombo ◽  
Luigi Lentini ◽  
Terenziano Raparelli ◽  
Andrea Trivella ◽  
Vladimir Viktorov

Because of their distinctive characteristics, aerostatic bearings are particularly suitable for high-precision applications. However, because of the compressibility of the lubricant, this kind of bearing is characterized by low relative stiffness and poor damping. Compensation methods represent a valuable solution to these limitations. This paper presents a design procedure for passively compensated bearings controlled by diaphragm valves. Given a desired air gap height at which the system should work, the procedure makes it possible to maximize the stiffness of the bearing around this value. The designed bearings exhibit a quasi-static infinite stiffness for load variation ranging from 20% to almost 50% of the maximum load capacity of the bearing. Moreover, the influence of different parameters on the performance of the compensated pad is evaluated through a sensitivity analysis.


Machines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 9
Author(s):  
Svenja Kalt ◽  
Karl Ludwig Stolle ◽  
Philipp Neuhaus ◽  
Thomas Herrmann ◽  
Alexander Koch ◽  
...  

The consideration of the thermal behavior of electric machines is becoming increasingly important in the machine design for electric vehicles due to the adaptation to more dynamic operating points compared to stationary applications. Whereas, the dependency of machine efficiency on thermal behavior is caused due to the impact of temperature on the resulting loss types. This leads to a shift of efficiency areas in the efficiency diagram of electric machines and has a significant impact on the maximum load capability and an impact on the cycle efficiency during operation, resulting in a reduction in the overall range of the electric vehicle. Therefore, this article aims at analyzing the thermal load limits of induction machines in regard to actual operation using measured driving data of battery electric vehicles. For this, a thermal model is implemented using MATLAB® and investigations to the sensitivity of model parameters as well as analysis of the continuous load capacity, thermal load and efficiency in driving cycles under changing boundary conditions are conducted.


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed M. Sayed

The perforated steel sheets have many uses, so they should be studied under the influence of the uniaxial tensile load. The presence of these holes in the steel sheets certainly affects the mechanical properties. This paper aims at studying the behavior of the stress-strain engineering relationships of the perforated steel sheets. To achieve this, the three-dimensional finite element (FE) model is mainly designed to investigate the effect of this condition. Experimental tests were carried out on solid specimens to be used in the test of model accuracy of the FE simulation. Simulation testing shows that the FE modeling revealed the ability to calculate the stress-strain engineering relationships of perforated steel sheets. It can be concluded that the effect of a perforated rhombus shape is greater than the others, and perforated square shape has no effect on the stress-strain engineering relationships. The efficiency of the perforated staggered or linearly distribution shapes with the actual net area on the applied loads has the opposite effect, as it reduces the load capacity for all types of perforated shapes. Despite the decrease in load capacity, it improves the properties of the steel sheets.


1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Etsion ◽  
D. P. Fleming

A flat sector shaped pad geometry for gas lubricated thrust bearings is analyzed considering both pitch and roll angles of the pad and the true film thickness distribution. Maximum load capacity is achieved when the pad is tilted so as to create a uniform minimum film thickness along the pad trailing edge. Performance characteristics for various geometries and operating conditions of gas thrust bearings are presented in the form of design curves. A comparison is made with the rectangular slider approximation. It is found that this approximation is unsafe for practical design, since it always overestimates load capacity.


1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (1) ◽  
pp. 226-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Cusano ◽  
T. F. Conry

The design problem is formulated for multi-recess hydrostatic journal bearings with a design criterion of minimum total power loss. The design is subject to the constraints of constant ratio of the recess area to the total bearing area and maximum load capacity for a given recess geometry. The L/D ratio, eccentricity ratio, ratio of recess area to total bearing area, and shaft rotational speed are considered as parameters. The analysis is based on the bearing model of Raimondi and Boyd [1]. This model is generally valid for low-to-moderate speeds and a ratio of recess area-to-total bearing area of approximately 0.5 or greater. Design charts are presented for bearings having a ratio of recess area-to-total bearing area of 0.6 and employing capillary and orifice restrictors, these being the most common types of compensating elements. A design example is given to illustrate the use of the design charts.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (22) ◽  
pp. 7538
Author(s):  
Wenkai Huang ◽  
Wei Hu ◽  
Tao Zou ◽  
Junlong Xiao ◽  
Puwei Lu ◽  
...  

Most existing wall-climbing robots have a fixed range of load capacity and a step distance that is small and mostly immutable. It is therefore difficult for them to adapt to a discontinuous wall with particularly large gaps. Based on a modular design and inspired by leech peristalsis and internal soft-bone connection, a bionic crawling modular wall-climbing robot is proposed in this paper. The robot demonstrates the ability to handle variable load characteristics by carrying different numbers of modules. Multiple motion modules are coupled with the internal soft bone so that they work together, giving the robot variable-step-distance functionality. This paper establishes the robotic kinematics model, presents the finite element simulation analysis of the model, and introduces the design of the multi-module cooperative-motion method. Our experiments show that the advantage of variable step distance allows the robot not only to quickly climb and turn on walls, but also to cross discontinuous walls. The maximum climbing step distance of the robot can reach 3.6 times the length of the module and can span a discontinuous wall with a space of 150 mm; the load capacity increases with the number of modules in series. The maximum load that modules can carry is about 1.3 times the self-weight.


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