Power Screw Lecture 1
Power Screw Lecture 1
Power Screws
1
Power Screws
6
Uses of Power Screws
◼ Obtain high mechanical advantage in order to
move large loads with a minimum effort. e.g
screw jack.
◼ Generate large forces e.g tensile testing
machine, compactor press.
◼ Obtain precise axial movements e.g. camera
calibration rigs.
Applications
Screw
Major diameter d,
Minor diameter dr
Mean dia or pitch diameter dp
Lead l, distance the nut moves for one turn rotation 6
Single and Double threaded screws
◼ Many tensile tests of threaded rods have shown that an unthreaded rod
having a diameter equal to the mean of the pitch diameter and minor
diameter will have the same tensile strength as the threaded rod. The area
of this unthreaded rod is called the tensile-stress area At of the thread rod.
14
Screw Designations
◼ Example:
◼ 1in-12 UNRF-2A-LH, A for Ext. Thread and B
for Internal, R root radius
◼ Metric M10x1.5
◼ 10 diameter mm major diameter,1.5
pitch
Screw Classifications
Unified National Standard ISO (Metric)
Tolerance Thread Pitch
d=12mm
fine
d=0.25” Class 2
metric
¼-20 UNF –2A M12 x 1.75
20 threads/in. external threads
p=1.75 mm/thread
The thread geometry of the metric M
and MJ profiles
12
13
14
Square and Acme threads
15
Square and Acme Threads are used
for the power screw
Power Screw Types
◼ Square
❑ strongest
❑ no radial load
❑ hard to manufacture
◼ Acme
❑ 29° included angle
❑ easier to manufacture
❑ common choice for
loading in both directions
◼ Buttress (contrafuerte)
❑ great strength
❑ only unidirectional loading
Mechanics of Power
Screws
18
◼ A square-threaded power screw with a single thread
having a mean diameter dm, a pitch p, a lead angle
(lamda) and a helix angle ѱ is loaded by the axial
compressive force F.
19
The torque required to raise or to lower
the load:
20
◼ Figure (a) represents lifting the load and figure (b) represent
lowering the load.
◼ The summation of all the unit axial forces acting upon the
normal thread area by F
◼ To raise the load, a force PR acts to the right (Fig. a), and to
lower the load, a force PL acts to the left (Fig. b)
◼ The friction force is the product of the coefficient of friction f
with the normal force N, and acts to oppose the motion
21
◼ The system is in equilibrium under the action of these forces:
◼ For raising the load
FH = PR − N sin − fN cos = 0
FV = F + fN sin − N cos = 0
◼ For lowering the load
22
◼ Solve each two equations for PR and PL, we have:
F (sin + f cos )
PR =
cos − f sin
F ( f cos − sin )
PL =
cos + f sin
◼ Divide the numerator and the denominator of these equations by
cos and use the relation tan =l/dm we then have respectively:
F (l / d m )+ f
PR =
1 ( fl / d m )
F f − (l / d m )
PL =
1+ ( fl / d m )
23
◼ The torque then can be found by multiply the force by the
mean radius dm/2. Therefore,
24
The force and torque required to raise
and lower the load :
25
❑ TR is the torque required for two purposes: to overcome
thread friction and to raise the load.
❑ TL is the torque required to lower the load. This torque
requires overcoming a part of the friction in lowering the
load. If the lead is larger or the friction is low, the load will
lower itself by causing the screw to spin without any
external effort.
❑ In such cases TL is negative or zero in equation. So, if
26
◼ Condition for self-locking:
◼ This leads to
l
f =
◼ But d m
l
tan =
d m
◼ Thus
f = tan
❑ This relation states that self-locking is obtained whenever
the coefficient of thread friction is equal to or greater than
the tangent of the thread lead angle.
self-locking – screw cannot turn from load F
back-driving – screw can be turned from load F 27
Efficiency:
◼ If we let the friction equal to zero then TR reduced to:
Fl Fd m l + fdm
To = TR =
2
◼ Thus, the efficiency can be written as
TR To Fl
e=
f =0
= =
TR TR 2TR
28
Acme and other
threads:
◼ The normal thread load is inclined to the axis because of the thread angle
2 and the lead angle .
◼ Since the lead angles are small, this inclination can be neglected and only
the effect of the thread angle considered. See figure 8-7a.
29
◼ Thus the friction term in the torque equation TR must be
divided by cos, for raising the load, or for tightening a screw
or bolt, this yields
30
A third component of torque must be
applied in power screw applications
◼ When it loaded axially, a thrust or collar bearing must be
employed between the rotating and stationary members in
order to carry the axial component. See figure 8-7b.
◼ If fc is a friction of collar friction, then
Ff c d c
Tc =
2
◼ For large collars, the torque should probably be computed in a
manner similar to that employed for disk clutches.
31
Stresses in Power Screws
◼ Stresses in Threads
❑ Body Stresses
◼ Axial
◼ Torsion
❑ Thread Stresses
◼ Bearing
◼ Bending
❑ Buckling
Tensile Stress
= F = 4F2
A d r
Torsional Stress
depends on friction at screw-nut interface
For screw and nut,
• if totally locked (rusted together), the screw experiences all of torque
• if frictionless, the screw experiences none of the torque
Tr 16 T
= =
J d r3
F 2F
B = − =−
d m nt p / 2 d m nt p p/2
p/2
Abearing=(p/2)(dmnt)
Thread Stresses – Bending
I = d r ( p / 2)
Fp 1
M = ,
3
,& c = p / 4
4 12 F
Mc 6F
b = =
I dr pnt p/2
p/2
For both bearing and bending, F and nt are dependent on how well
load is shared among teeth, therefore
use Factual=0.38F and nt=1 (derived from experiments)
Thread Stresses – Transverse shear stresses
42
Mohr’s Circle- Von Mises ’ at the top of the root
“plane”
' = 1
2
( − ) + (
x y
2
y
2 2
(
− z ) + ( z − x ) + 6 +
2
xy
F
2
yz + 2
zx ) 0.5
6F 16Tp/2
x = xy = 3
drnt p dr p/2
y = 0 yz = 0 z
y
4F
z = − 2 xz = 0
dr x
Buckling
K = radius of gyration
l l
SR = = (S R )D = 2E
k I
Sy
use d r A
S R (SR )D use Johnson
S R (SR )D use Euler
PCR 1 S y S R
2
2 EI
A
= Sy −
E 2
PCR =
l2
◼ The engaged threads cannot share the load equally.
Some experiments show that the first engaged thread
carries 0.38 of the load, the second 0.25, the third
0.18, and the seventh is free of load.
40
Example:
◼ A square-thread power screw has a major diameter of 32mm
and a pitch of 4mm with double threads. The given data
include f = fc =0.08, dc = 40mm, and F = 6.4kN per screw.
◼ Determine:
1. The thread depth, thread width, pitch diameter, minor
diameter, and lead.
2. The torque required to raise and lower the load
3. The efficiency during lifting the load
4. The body stresses, torsional and compressive
5. The bearing stress
6. The thread stress bending at the root, shear at the root, and
Von Mises stress
41
Solution
42
Solution…
2. Using equation the torque required to turn the screw
against the load is:
TRaising = TRaising by power screw + TC thrust collar
Fd m
l + fd m + Ffc d c = 15.94 + 10.24 = 26.18N.m
TR =
2 d m − fl 2
43
3. The overall efficiency in raising the load is:
Fl 6.4(8)
e= = = 0.311
2TR 2 (26.18)
4. The body shear stress due to torsional moment TR at the
outside of the screw body is:
16T
= = 6.07MPa
d r
3
= − 4F2 = −10.39MPa
d r
44
Solution…
B = − 2(0.38F ) = −12.9MPa
πd m (1) p
Mc 6F
= = = 41.5MPa
b
I d r nt p
45
x = 41.5MPa , xy = 0
y =0 , yz = 6.07MPa
z = −10.39MPa , zx = 0
' = 1 (41.5 − 0 )2 + (0 − (− 10.39 ))2 + (− 10.39 − 41.5)2 + 6(6.07 2 )0.5 = 48.7MPa
2
46