nekojita
Bioengineer
- Feb 11, 2005
- 30
Hi,
First I'll say that I am not a mechanical engineer (electrical )so please bear with me as I have been assigned to investigate the problem below.
We have a pneumatic cylinder configured with an inlet port, a piston attached to a rod, and an outlet vent. The inlet port is connected to a valve which provides a burst of air pressure. (not constant)
The rod drives a sharpened component into an external second material. The constituent equations that I have used to study this are:
F= A *P; Eq1
where A=area and P= pressure
Alternatively, F= m*a; Eq2
Where m= mass and a = acceleration
Using a high speed camera, we were able to determine the velocity by applying the following:
v=d/t; Eq3
Where d= displacement and t = time
Acceleration was determined using the following:
a= (v-u)/t; Eq4
Where v= final velocity, i.e., 0m/s, Initial velocity, t= time
Finally, momentum, p = m*v; Eq5
Where m= mass and v = velocity
The above calculations are all static, however, to understand this dynamically, I would like to calculate the force, velocity, and momentum as a function of displacement of the rod in the cylinder as well as the calculation of force, velocity, and momentum as a function of time.
It would also be good to factor in the friction of the piston and cylinder wall as well if possible.
There are two cases:
1) In the first case there is a small separation distance (gap) between the rod and the driven slug when the rod has reached its full stroke travel.
2) In the second case, the rod drives the slug of material into the second material and the rod and slug are in contact at the end of the rod's stroke. (no gap)
The contention is that the loss in momentum (the rod and piston no longer in contact with the slug) is significant because the mass of the slug is very small compared to the mass of the rod and piston. The counter argument is that the slug's velocity is sufficient to cause it to continue to drive into the external material after loss of contact.
This is an interesting problem but I am stuck. Any help from the Forum would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Art
First I'll say that I am not a mechanical engineer (electrical )so please bear with me as I have been assigned to investigate the problem below.
We have a pneumatic cylinder configured with an inlet port, a piston attached to a rod, and an outlet vent. The inlet port is connected to a valve which provides a burst of air pressure. (not constant)
The rod drives a sharpened component into an external second material. The constituent equations that I have used to study this are:
F= A *P; Eq1
where A=area and P= pressure
Alternatively, F= m*a; Eq2
Where m= mass and a = acceleration
Using a high speed camera, we were able to determine the velocity by applying the following:
v=d/t; Eq3
Where d= displacement and t = time
Acceleration was determined using the following:
a= (v-u)/t; Eq4
Where v= final velocity, i.e., 0m/s, Initial velocity, t= time
Finally, momentum, p = m*v; Eq5
Where m= mass and v = velocity
The above calculations are all static, however, to understand this dynamically, I would like to calculate the force, velocity, and momentum as a function of displacement of the rod in the cylinder as well as the calculation of force, velocity, and momentum as a function of time.
It would also be good to factor in the friction of the piston and cylinder wall as well if possible.
There are two cases:
1) In the first case there is a small separation distance (gap) between the rod and the driven slug when the rod has reached its full stroke travel.
2) In the second case, the rod drives the slug of material into the second material and the rod and slug are in contact at the end of the rod's stroke. (no gap)
The contention is that the loss in momentum (the rod and piston no longer in contact with the slug) is significant because the mass of the slug is very small compared to the mass of the rod and piston. The counter argument is that the slug's velocity is sufficient to cause it to continue to drive into the external material after loss of contact.
This is an interesting problem but I am stuck. Any help from the Forum would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Art