AlphaH2Omega
Structural
- Nov 4, 2023
- 7
Hi all, first time here in search of some advice please.
I am building a machine that is required to transfer torque to a generator and would like some opinion on the drive shaft material and sizes required.
Given the shaft is submerged and low rotation speed 10rpm, I was thinking maybe nickel plated 4340 bar with Vesconite sleeves pressed onto the bearing surface and then housed within a vesconite bearing to prevent wear to the shaft (if vesconite on vesconite is not advisable and you think I would be better off having the shaft bearing directly to the vesconite please let me know)
The shaft is 3000mm long with a 250mm long vesconite bearing within a captive housing at each end with 1800diameter sprockets locked to the shaft with a sufficient boss using either a spline or multiple keyways (I would prefer keyways as a fail safe to prevent over loading)
The torsion on the shaft will be up to a continuous 500,000Nm applied through the sprockets(38mm thick) fixed to the shaft through the bosses (200mm wide) with the outboard edge of the sprocket 12mm from the most inboard edge of the vesconite bearings to accommodate a thrust bearing to prevent shaft end play.
The load is dynamic and will be applied to a generator stator through a gearbox on the outside of the machine, 500kNm being the torsion load that would accumulate if the stator was locked from rotating, the driveline and stator is to be designed in conjunction with eachother and the main output further down the track, however the force origin has an output of 500,000Nm of torque at 10rpm. The distance from the outboard face of the sprockets to the driven joint on the gearbox outside the tank, having gone through a sufficient shaft seal, that will transfere load to the stator is 400mm.
At this stage I do not know the resistance that the stator will offer, so intend to work the initial design as if the resistance to tha torque is 100%, thus having stalleed the gearbox kinetics - see that as a safety factor ensuring than any initial failure point is the loint between the outpt shaft and the gearbox.(Please let me know if you have a better idea)
What I really need is design advice on material and dimension requirements for the strength of such a drive shaft, and a description of recommended arrangements of keyways that would be suitable for the task.
Based on the 12mm offset between the innermost of the bearing surface and the 400mm from where the torque is applied to its transfer point, I consider a reverse bending moment through the length of the shaft between the bearings requiring a straightness, and fatigue calculation; and a torsion through the shaft between the sprocket and the output joint across 400mm of shaft length to be the critical factors.
Please offer what design advice you see fit.
Thankyou
Kyle.
I am building a machine that is required to transfer torque to a generator and would like some opinion on the drive shaft material and sizes required.
Given the shaft is submerged and low rotation speed 10rpm, I was thinking maybe nickel plated 4340 bar with Vesconite sleeves pressed onto the bearing surface and then housed within a vesconite bearing to prevent wear to the shaft (if vesconite on vesconite is not advisable and you think I would be better off having the shaft bearing directly to the vesconite please let me know)
The shaft is 3000mm long with a 250mm long vesconite bearing within a captive housing at each end with 1800diameter sprockets locked to the shaft with a sufficient boss using either a spline or multiple keyways (I would prefer keyways as a fail safe to prevent over loading)
The torsion on the shaft will be up to a continuous 500,000Nm applied through the sprockets(38mm thick) fixed to the shaft through the bosses (200mm wide) with the outboard edge of the sprocket 12mm from the most inboard edge of the vesconite bearings to accommodate a thrust bearing to prevent shaft end play.
The load is dynamic and will be applied to a generator stator through a gearbox on the outside of the machine, 500kNm being the torsion load that would accumulate if the stator was locked from rotating, the driveline and stator is to be designed in conjunction with eachother and the main output further down the track, however the force origin has an output of 500,000Nm of torque at 10rpm. The distance from the outboard face of the sprockets to the driven joint on the gearbox outside the tank, having gone through a sufficient shaft seal, that will transfere load to the stator is 400mm.
At this stage I do not know the resistance that the stator will offer, so intend to work the initial design as if the resistance to tha torque is 100%, thus having stalleed the gearbox kinetics - see that as a safety factor ensuring than any initial failure point is the loint between the outpt shaft and the gearbox.(Please let me know if you have a better idea)
What I really need is design advice on material and dimension requirements for the strength of such a drive shaft, and a description of recommended arrangements of keyways that would be suitable for the task.
Based on the 12mm offset between the innermost of the bearing surface and the 400mm from where the torque is applied to its transfer point, I consider a reverse bending moment through the length of the shaft between the bearings requiring a straightness, and fatigue calculation; and a torsion through the shaft between the sprocket and the output joint across 400mm of shaft length to be the critical factors.
Please offer what design advice you see fit.
Thankyou
Kyle.