doctorsundar
Mechanical
- Nov 15, 2002
- 4
I am trying to compute the surface stress on a steel tube when a spring (made of steel wire) is wrapped around the outside of this tube. The steel wire wraps itself around this tube as the tube spins at about 50 rpm.
I suppose that I first need to compute the tension in the steel wire. When an initially straight steel wire gets bent permanently into a circular shape of radius R, I suppose that it has undergone plastic deformation. How can I compute the force needed to plastically bend a wire into a circle of radius R?
This force will compress the circumference of the pipe, i.e., impose an external pressure on the pipe. To compute this pressure, should I consider local deformation, i.e., compute the Hertz contact stresses at the contact area between the pipe and the spring? How can I do this?
Any help will be appreciated. Thanks.
Sundar
I suppose that I first need to compute the tension in the steel wire. When an initially straight steel wire gets bent permanently into a circular shape of radius R, I suppose that it has undergone plastic deformation. How can I compute the force needed to plastically bend a wire into a circle of radius R?
This force will compress the circumference of the pipe, i.e., impose an external pressure on the pipe. To compute this pressure, should I consider local deformation, i.e., compute the Hertz contact stresses at the contact area between the pipe and the spring? How can I do this?
Any help will be appreciated. Thanks.
Sundar