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Pressure loading on circle shaped plate

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xr4titis

Mechanical
Jan 3, 2008
21
Hola forum,

We are modifying an existing nozzle (20" I.D. X 8" high X 63" thick hoop) to perform pressure testing on the lid that it mates to. We intend to close off the other end of the nozzle by welding a plate to the bottom of it. We've done this before with the old fabricator "that'll hold" calculations. I'd like to go at this one a little smarter and find the proper thickness required and maybe the stress on the weld.

The information:
P = 165 psi
A = 314 in^2

Assumption:
I can apply a force of P*A at the center of the plate.
I can react that force at the area where the plate meets the nozzle. (O.D. = 21.25 X I.D. = 20)

The question:
How do I calculate moment of inertia across a plate of changing width (a circle).

Any help is appreciated even the proper terminology of what I'm trying to do so I can look it up.

 
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"How do I calculate moment of inertia across a plate of changing width (a circle)." ... you don't, in fact asking raises all sorts of questions about how much structures/stress you know.

uniform pressure on a round plate is a standard problem with a simple handbook solution, but if you're going to apply 52,000 lbs to it you need to be Way more careful.

good luck, and get professional help; or do it the good ol' way.
 
Can't say I didn't expect that...I'm a bit rusty. I'm sure we will do it "the good 'ol way" but I'm still want to try and figure this out.

Can't you give me a hint?
 
The /hint/ is t^4.

It is covered in Roark. You are looking at a simply supported circular plate, not a beam.



Cheers

Greg Locock


New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
 
Thank you sir. I couldn't find anything in my old textbooks or Machinery's Handbook on this but I did find information on the web leading me to an equation for a distributed load on a circular plate with clamped ends. The resulting displacement is reasonably close to the displacement I get using FEA.

The problem is (I'm embarrassed to ask) is that I cannot successfully relate the displacement to the corresponding stress in the plate.

I'm using Hooke's Law multiplying E (modulus of Elasticity) by the calculated displacement divided by the original thickness. The result does not correlate well with FEA results.

I know this is a dumb question and I would ask the engineer sitting next to me if there was one. Any help is appreciated.

 
As mentioned by Greg, you need to look into Roark. The way you tried to calculate stresses fails as you are not using correct / real strain (to multiply with Young's modulus to get stress value). Deflection of the plate divided by its thickness, while being some measure of strain, is not a real strain, especially as you probably want a stress in the plane of the plate.
 
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