smjmitchell
New member
- Jun 6, 2002
- 13
Hi All,
I have a rubber cylinder 40mm dia (1.57") and 331mm (13.03") long. It is made from natural rubber of duro 50. The rubber is supported from buckling under compressive load by a number of diagaphrams that slide over the rubber and are evenly spaced along the length.
I need to predict the load vs deflection characteristics of the rubber cylinder when subject to a compressive loading directed along the axis of the cylinder. I fully understand that testing is the only way to get accurate results. However before testing I would like to do some calculations to demonstrate that the rubber selection is at least roughly right.
My first question is:
Is there an approximate way to predict the deflection if the rubber under a given load. Max strain would be approx 24% if the rubber hardness and sizes are right.
I am interested in any of the following:
1. Rules of thumb.
2. Approximate analysis methods.
3. Semi Emphirical methods based on published test data.
4. More advanced theoretical methods.
5. FEA modelling. I have access to an FEA code that can model rubber using the Generalised Mooney Rivlin, Mooney Rivlin, Neo-Hookean, Ogden rubber models. However the problem is that I don't have any of the material constants for the material. Is there a source of such constants in the literature ? If such constants were available I would build a simple axisymmetric model. However to be honest I would prefer a non FEA approach - but it would be interesting to check against the FEA.
Unfortunately I have no other information on the rubber except that it is natural rubber of 50 duro.
Question 2:
This rubber cylinder is from the landing gear of a light aircraft. It will be subjected to rapid rates of loading (i.e. landing shocks). Does rubber of this type behave in a similar manner when loaded with a static load and loaded dynamically. i.e. If I know what the maximum dynamic load and deflection are, will I get the same deflection if I load the rubber cylinder with the same load in a static condition ????
BTW I am no expert on rubber: far from it ... this is the first time I have dabbled in the field. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Steve
I have a rubber cylinder 40mm dia (1.57") and 331mm (13.03") long. It is made from natural rubber of duro 50. The rubber is supported from buckling under compressive load by a number of diagaphrams that slide over the rubber and are evenly spaced along the length.
I need to predict the load vs deflection characteristics of the rubber cylinder when subject to a compressive loading directed along the axis of the cylinder. I fully understand that testing is the only way to get accurate results. However before testing I would like to do some calculations to demonstrate that the rubber selection is at least roughly right.
My first question is:
Is there an approximate way to predict the deflection if the rubber under a given load. Max strain would be approx 24% if the rubber hardness and sizes are right.
I am interested in any of the following:
1. Rules of thumb.
2. Approximate analysis methods.
3. Semi Emphirical methods based on published test data.
4. More advanced theoretical methods.
5. FEA modelling. I have access to an FEA code that can model rubber using the Generalised Mooney Rivlin, Mooney Rivlin, Neo-Hookean, Ogden rubber models. However the problem is that I don't have any of the material constants for the material. Is there a source of such constants in the literature ? If such constants were available I would build a simple axisymmetric model. However to be honest I would prefer a non FEA approach - but it would be interesting to check against the FEA.
Unfortunately I have no other information on the rubber except that it is natural rubber of 50 duro.
Question 2:
This rubber cylinder is from the landing gear of a light aircraft. It will be subjected to rapid rates of loading (i.e. landing shocks). Does rubber of this type behave in a similar manner when loaded with a static load and loaded dynamically. i.e. If I know what the maximum dynamic load and deflection are, will I get the same deflection if I load the rubber cylinder with the same load in a static condition ????
BTW I am no expert on rubber: far from it ... this is the first time I have dabbled in the field. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Steve