IKBrunel
Mechanical
- Jan 3, 2008
- 16
Hi,
I am studying the rapid deceleration of a turbo rotor during a catastrophic failure and I need to develop a hand-calc analysis method to help assess the results from tests.
The turbo product is about 150mm dia by 200mm tall. The 1.2Kg rotor spins at 60,000rpm and when it fails it stops in less than half a revolution.
Roughly:
Rotational kinetic energy = 18KJ
Angular momentum = 5.76Kgm2/s
therefore the failure torque for 0.4ms stop = 14.4KNm
The total product mass is 9Kg and is secured by some flange bolts which must be proved to be substantial. There are many flange and product variants to consider and we need a way of proving all products are safe based on the results of a few tests.
Using strain gauges the failure torque and shock duration of one failed product have been found (5.6KNm and 0.4ms) but the the included area under the curve is far from equalling the change in angular velocity.
Furthermore, the indicated failure torque suggests our bolts should have sheared easily but they didn't.
I wondered whether to use a bolt strength hand calc that maybe allows for a torque/acceleration amplitude magnification factor based on the stiffness and coulomb damping of the bolted joint.
Does anyone have any experience with such calculations, or can anyone point me to relevent effort elsewhere?
Many thanks
Matt
I am studying the rapid deceleration of a turbo rotor during a catastrophic failure and I need to develop a hand-calc analysis method to help assess the results from tests.
The turbo product is about 150mm dia by 200mm tall. The 1.2Kg rotor spins at 60,000rpm and when it fails it stops in less than half a revolution.
Roughly:
Rotational kinetic energy = 18KJ
Angular momentum = 5.76Kgm2/s
therefore the failure torque for 0.4ms stop = 14.4KNm
The total product mass is 9Kg and is secured by some flange bolts which must be proved to be substantial. There are many flange and product variants to consider and we need a way of proving all products are safe based on the results of a few tests.
Using strain gauges the failure torque and shock duration of one failed product have been found (5.6KNm and 0.4ms) but the the included area under the curve is far from equalling the change in angular velocity.
Furthermore, the indicated failure torque suggests our bolts should have sheared easily but they didn't.
I wondered whether to use a bolt strength hand calc that maybe allows for a torque/acceleration amplitude magnification factor based on the stiffness and coulomb damping of the bolted joint.
Does anyone have any experience with such calculations, or can anyone point me to relevent effort elsewhere?
Many thanks
Matt