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You are here: Home / Articles / Rotating Shafts Under Bending Stress

by Mike Sondalini Leave a Comment

Rotating Shafts Under Bending Stress

Rotating Shafts Under Bending Stress

Rotating shafts under bending stress. It is common to transmit motion using rotating shafts. The shafts are mounted in bearings and turned by force through a drive arrangement. The shafts usually also carry a load. These loads cause bending and the shaft reacts by producing counter stresses within itself. Provided the reactive stresses are within the shaft’s strength range it will take the load. But if the stresses are greater than what the shaft can take it will bend. Even if the stresses are below the load limit but fluctuate, it is possible that the shaft will break from fatigue. The point of highest stress can be found by looking at the arrangement of the shaft supports and loads and calculating the forces and stresses.

Keywords: Bending moments, tensile stress

If you were to hold a half-full pail of water in your right hand with your arm outstretched your muscles would start to ache. It would not be long before you would have to put it down because of the pain. Your arm was under stress.

Definition of Stress and Strain

Stress is a term used to describe the internal pressure on a material caused by force acting on it. The pain in the muscles of your outstretched right arm was from the internal pressure applied by your muscles.

Strain describes the internal distortion produced by the force. Your muscles contracting against the force of the half-full pail of water were straining to keep the load up. Where there is a force there will also be stress and strain together.

Bending Stress in Machinery Shafts

Figure No. 1 shows three common situations of loaded round, rotating shafts. On the left-hand side is a cantilevered load such as the drive pulley on an electric motor. In the center is a uniform load such as on the head and tail pulleys of a conveyor. To the right is a point load such as occurs on the shafts carrying the gears in a gearbox.

The term ‘simply supported’ just means the shaft is held up at the two ends so that both ends are able to move and curve with the effect of the load. If one end could not bow with the load, such as if the shaft was in a journal bearing and not a roller bearing, the term to use would be ‘restrained end- supported’ load. In this case the shaft could not start to bend until it was clear of the restraining journal and the resulting stresses would be in different positions along the shaft.

Figure No. 1. Typical Situations of Shafts under Load.

Each of the shafts can be analysed and the stresses calculated. The highest stress is then checked against the allowable yield stress before it bends (See article 233 ‘Stress in Metals) and the fatigue limits of the shaft material (See article 283 ‘Metal Fatigue Failure’). The analysis determines if the shaft will meet its duty, or if a different size shaft or a different material with greater stress carrying ability, is needed from that originally proposed.

Figure No. 2. Bending Moment and Deflection Diagrams.

The point of highest stress is found by drawing a bending moment diagram for the shaft. This is a graph showing the force multiplied by the distance along the shaft from a start point (datum). The size of the bending moment depends on the amount of load and the distance it acts from the datum. A load acting a long way from the datum produces bigger bending moments in the shaft than one acting closer to the datum. Figure No. 2 shows bending moment diagrams for each of the three load conditions of Figure No. 1.

Look for the Point of Greatest Stress

For single diameter shafts the location of the highest bending moment is also the point of highest stress. If the shaft is stepped with different diameters it is necessary to calculate the maximum stress along each diameter. The stress in a particular spot on a shaft depends on the shaft’s ability to carry the moment. For a round shaft that ability depends on the area available to take the load and the strength of the shaft material.

The ability to resist breakage depends on the shape and size of the shaft (Second Moment of Area) and the ability of the material to resist tearing apart (Young’s Modulus). If the shaft thickness is too little, or the shaft material is too weak, the shaft will bend or snap. Knowing the location of the maximum stress allows one to locate the point of likely failure in overload situations and to prevent them arising.

Bending moments also cause deflections. The shaft bends under the combined effect of the loads. In simply supported situations the maximum deflection is at the point of maximum bending moment. This is also the point of maximum stress. By looking for the place where the shaft is forced furthest from its axis on simply supported set-ups, you can find the point of highest stress.

Figure No. 2 also shows the deflected shape the shafts would take under the imposed loads. These deflections would normally be from a few 1/10ths mm to a few millimeters depending on the size and position of the loads, location of supports and the properties of the shaft. Below is real-life tale of what happens when a shaft is forced to bend beyond its stress limits.

Snapping Shafts Tell a Story of Deflection

The screw conveyor (auger) shaft was broken in half right at the center. It was a 3200 mm long, 50 mm (2”) diameter, Schedule 40, 316 stainless steel pipe with the 1:1 pitch screw flights stitch-welded to it. The break was dead in the middle between the two end-supporting roller bearings.

An identical break had happened only 2 months previously. What was causing the brand new shaft to break?

A close examination of the screw conveyor trough told the story. Product had built up 10 – 15 mm thick on the bottom of the trough. It was caked on and would only come off when hit with the blade end of a pinch bar. When the screw had been in place in the trough, it was forced to ride over the thick crust, while the two ends were held tight in the bearings. The crust produced a deflection in the shaft. The biggest deflection was at the center of the screw where it caused the greatest bending stress.

As the screw turned during operation, the highest cycling stress was in the middle at the point of maximum deflection. The stress in the bar changed from tension to compression during each turn of the shaft. Exactly like you bending a paper clip up and down until it breaks. The shaft failed for the same reason – metal fatigue due to cycling stresses caused by the crust build-up bending the shaft.

If you have screw conveyors in use on crust-building product, make sure the crust on the bottom of the trough is regularly cleaned out. Otherwise be ready to change out the shaft. If you are experiencing any shaft breakage at the mid- point between end supports, check to see if the shaft is experiencing excessive deflection under cyclic or fluctuating loads.

Mike Sondalini – Equipment Longevity Engineer

Reference: Engineering Considerations of Stress, Strain and Strength, R C Juvinall, McGraw-Hill Book Company.

Mechanics of Soilds and Structures, P P Benham, F V Warnock, Pitman Publishing.

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If you found this interesting, you may like the ebook Process Control Essentials.

Filed Under: Articles, on Maintenance Reliability, Plant Maintenance

About Mike Sondalini

In engineering and maintenance since 1974, Mike’s career extends across original equipment manufacturing, beverage processing and packaging, steel fabrication, chemical processing and manufacturing, quality management, project management, enterprise asset management, plant and equipment maintenance, and maintenance training. His specialty is helping companies build highly effective operational risk management processes, develop enterprise asset management systems for ultra-high reliable assets, and instil the precision maintenance skills needed for world class equipment reliability.

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