whistleboy
Mechanical
- Nov 7, 2012
- 8
Hi All,
I really need some help understanding bending stresses and stress concentrations in Morse Tapers. Specifically, I'm trying to understand the influence of a slot (and orientation of the slot) in the female component of a Morse Taper when the male component is subject to bending. I've created an illustration depicting the scenarios I'm trying to wrap my head around in hopes someone may be able to point me in the right direction. Most Morse Taper information I could find deals more with hoop stresses, friction, dissociation, etc., but not bending and modified geometry/stress concentrations in the female component.
I've searched the great forums here, reviewed Peterson's Stress Concentration Factors, looked through many Materials texts and searched the peer-reviewed literature for similar instances. The closest I could find was a finite element model of a hip replacement that utilizes a very similar design (Analysis of the stem-sleeve interface in a modular titanium alloy femoral component for total hip replacement, Kurtz, 2001). They reported that maximum stresses on the male component occurred at the BOTTOM of the taper junction when oriented as shown in the representation second from left (slot centered in view).
Can anyone help me understand how the slot geometry and orientation on the female component might influence the stresses on the male component when the male component is subject to bending?
Thank you so much!
I really need some help understanding bending stresses and stress concentrations in Morse Tapers. Specifically, I'm trying to understand the influence of a slot (and orientation of the slot) in the female component of a Morse Taper when the male component is subject to bending. I've created an illustration depicting the scenarios I'm trying to wrap my head around in hopes someone may be able to point me in the right direction. Most Morse Taper information I could find deals more with hoop stresses, friction, dissociation, etc., but not bending and modified geometry/stress concentrations in the female component.
I've searched the great forums here, reviewed Peterson's Stress Concentration Factors, looked through many Materials texts and searched the peer-reviewed literature for similar instances. The closest I could find was a finite element model of a hip replacement that utilizes a very similar design (Analysis of the stem-sleeve interface in a modular titanium alloy femoral component for total hip replacement, Kurtz, 2001). They reported that maximum stresses on the male component occurred at the BOTTOM of the taper junction when oriented as shown in the representation second from left (slot centered in view).
Can anyone help me understand how the slot geometry and orientation on the female component might influence the stresses on the male component when the male component is subject to bending?
Thank you so much!
