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ElasticityPolars 04 BodyForcesRotatingDiscs

1) The document discusses rotating discs, including solid and hollow discs. It analyzes the stresses and displacements that occur in discs rotating at a constant angular velocity due to centripetal forces. 2) For a solid disc, the maximum stress occurs at the center and the disc expands slightly at the outer edge. 3) For a hollow disc, the stresses and displacements are derived satisfying boundary conditions of no stress at the inner and outer edges.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views

ElasticityPolars 04 BodyForcesRotatingDiscs

1) The document discusses rotating discs, including solid and hollow discs. It analyzes the stresses and displacements that occur in discs rotating at a constant angular velocity due to centripetal forces. 2) For a solid disc, the maximum stress occurs at the center and the disc expands slightly at the outer edge. 3) For a hollow disc, the stresses and displacements are derived satisfying boundary conditions of no stress at the inner and outer edges.

Uploaded by

Alex Cooper
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Section 4.

4.4 Rotating Discs

4.4.1 The Rotating Disc

Consider a thin disc rotating with constant angular velocity , Fig. 4.4.1. Material
particles are subjected to a centripetal acceleration a r r 2 . The subscript r indicates
an acceleration in the radial direction and the minus sign indicates that the particles are
accelerating towards the centre of the disc.

2
r

Figure 4.4.1: the rotating disc

The accelerations lead to an inertial force (per unit volume) Fa r 2 which in turn
leads to stresses in the disc. The inertial force is an axisymmetric loading and so this is
an axisymmetric problem. The axisymmetric equation of equilibrium is given by 4.3.5.
Adding in the acceleration term gives the corresponding equation of motion:

1 2
rr
rr r , (4.4.1)
r r

This equation can be expressed as

1
rr
rr br 0, (4.4.2)
r r

where br r 2 . Thus the dynamic rotating disc problem has been converted into an
equivalent static problem of a disc subjected to a known body force. Note that, in a
general dynamic problem, and unlike here, one does not know what the accelerations are
they have to be found as part of the solution procedure.

Using the strain-displacement relations 4.3.2 and the plane stress Hooke s law 4.3.3 then
leads to the differential equation

d 2u 1 du 1 1 2
2
u r (4.4.3)
dr 2 r dr r2 E

This is Eqn. 4.3.6 with a non-homogeneous term. The solution is derived in the
Appendix to this section, §4.4.3:

Solid Mechanics Part II 78 Kelly


Section 4.4

2
1 11
u C1 r C 2 r3 2
(4.4.4)
r 8 E

As in §4.3.4, let A EC 2 / 1 and C EC1 / 2 1 , and the full general solution is,
using 4.3.2 and 4.3.3, { Problem 1}

1 1 2
A 2C 3 r2
r2
rr
8
1 1 2
A 2 2C 1 3 r2
r 8
1 A 3 2 2
1 21 C 1 r2 (4.4.5)
r2
rr
E 8
1 A 1 2 2
1 21 C 1 r2
E r2 8
1 A 1 2 2 3
u 1 21 Cr 1 r
E r 8

which reduce to 4.3.9 when 0.

A Solid Disc

For a solid disc, A in 4.4.5 must be zero to ensure finite stresses and strains at r 0 . C is
then obtained from the boundary condition rr (b) 0 , where b is the disc radius:

1 2
A 0, C 3 b2 (4.4.6)
16

The stresses and displacements are

3 2
rr (r ) b2 r2
8
3 2 1 3 2
(r ) b2 r (4.4.7)
8 3
3 2 1 1
u(r ) r b2 r2
8 E 3

Note that the displacement is zero at the disc centre, as it must be, but the strains (and
hence stresses) do not have to be, and are not, zero there.

Dimensionless stress and displacement are plotted in Fig. 4.4.2 for the case of 0.3 .
The maximum stress occurs at r 0 , where

3 2
rr (0) ( 0) b2 (4.4.8)
8

Solid Mechanics Part II 79 Kelly


Section 4.4

The disc expands by an amount

1 2
u (b) b3 (4.4.9)
4E

0.9

8 0.8

2 2
3 b 0.7

rr
0.6
8E
2 3
u 0.5
3 1 b
0.4
u

0.3

0.2

0.1

0
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1

r /b

Figure 4.4.2: stresses and displacements in the solid rotating disc

A Hollow Disc

The boundary conditions for the hollow disc are

rr ( a) 0, rr (b ) 0 (4.4.10)

where a and b are the inner and outer radii respectively. It follows from 4.4.5 that

1 2 1
A 3 a 2b 2 , C 3 2
a2 b2 (4.4.11)
8 16

and the stresses and displacement are

3 2 a 2b 2
(r ) a2 b2 r2
r2
rr
8
3 2 1 3 2 a 2b 2
(r ) a2 b2 r (4.4.12)
8 3 r2
3 2 1 1 1 a 2b2
u(r ) r a2 b2 r2
8 E 3 1 r2

Solid Mechanics Part II 80 Kelly


Section 4.4

which reduce to 4.4.7 when a 0.

Dimensionless stress and displacement are plotted in Fig. 4.4.3 for the case of 0.3
and a / b 0.2 . The maximum stress occurs at the inner surface, where

3 2 1
( 0) b2 1 a / b2 (4.4.13)
4 3

which is approximately twice the solid-disc maximum stress.

2.5

2
8
2 2
3 b
1.5

8E
2 3
u
3 1 b
1

u
0.5
rr

0
0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1

r /b

Figure 4.4.3: stresses and displacements in the hollow rotating disc

4.4.2 Problems

1. Derive the full solution equations 4.4.5 for the thin rotating disc, from the
displacement solution 4.4.4.

4.4.3 Appendix: Solution to Eqn. 4.4.3

As in §4.3.8, transform Eqn. 4.4.3 using r e t into

d 2u 1 2
u e 3t 2
(4.4.14)
dt 2 E

Solid Mechanics Part II 81 Kelly


Section 4.4

The homogeneous solution is given by 4.3.31. Assume a particular solution of the form
u p Ae 3t which, from 4.4.14, gives

2
11 2 3t
up e (4.4.15)
8 E

Adding together the homogeneous and particular solutions and transforming back to r s
then gives 4.4.4.

Solid Mechanics Part II 82 Kelly

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