MechaWolf
Mechanical
- Feb 13, 2013
- 8
I have a thin ceramic tape formed into a disc (washer shape)- 0.2mm thick, external diameter 30mm, internal diameter 13mm. This works through a temperature range of 0 - 1000 degrees C. The change to the internal diameter through this temperature change is around 1.5mm. The material has a Youngs Modulus of 120GPa, Poisson's Ration 0.24, and Flexural Strength 320 MPa.
I am trying to understand the forces on internal diameter if these are held at 13mm and not permitted to change by 1.5mm, with the top and bottom also being clamped.
Anybody provide a formula?
The end result is to assess different materials as the internal component to see which one can withstand the forces applied from the ceramic tape. The internal materials will have a different co-efficient of expansion, and therefore there will be a interference.
Thanks
I am trying to understand the forces on internal diameter if these are held at 13mm and not permitted to change by 1.5mm, with the top and bottom also being clamped.
Anybody provide a formula?
The end result is to assess different materials as the internal component to see which one can withstand the forces applied from the ceramic tape. The internal materials will have a different co-efficient of expansion, and therefore there will be a interference.
Thanks