Chapter_2
Chapter_2
TORSION OF
CIRCULAR and non-
circular structures
Introduction
Members in torsion are encountered in many engineering applications. The most
common application is provided by transmission shafts, which are used to transmit
power from one point to another
circular shafts are commonly used to transmit power in rotating machinery
Because a circular cross section is an efficient shape for
resisting torsional loads
A shaft is said to be in torsion, when equal and opposite torques are applied at the
two ends of the shaft. .
Due to the application of the torques at the two ends, the shaft is subjected to a
twisting moment.
This causes the shear stresses and shear strains in the material of the shaft.
Torsion refers to the twisting of a straight bar when it is loaded by
moments (or torques) that tend to produce rotation about the longitudinal axis of
the bar.
When a uniform circular shaft is subjected to a torque
it can be shown that every section of the shaft is subjected
to a state of pure shear (Fig. below),
The moment of resistance developed by the
shear stresses being everywhere equal to the
magnitude, and opposite in sense, to the
applied torque.
Torsion of Circular Shafts
a. Simplifying assumptions
During the deformation, the cross sections are not distorted in any
manner - they remain plane, and the radius r does not change. In
addition, the length L of the shaft remains constant
Based on these observations, we make the following assumptions:
I. The material of the shaft is homogeneous, isotropic and perfectly elastic.
II. The material obeys Hooke’s law and the stress remains within limit
III. The twisting couples act in the transverse planes only.
IV. Circular cross sections remain plane (do not warp) and
perpendicular to the axis of the shaft.
V. Cross sections do not deform (there is no strain in the plane of the
cross section).
VI. The distances between cross sections do not change (the axial
normal strain is zero).
MECHANICS OF MATERIALS
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Shaft Deformations
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Fourth
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Shearing Strain
• It follows that
L L
or
• Shear strain is proportional to twist and radius
max L and c
c max
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J 1
Themax
shearing stress varies linearly with the radial
4
2 position in the section.
c
• Recall that the sum of the moments from the internal
stress distribution is equal to the torque on the shaft at
the section,
max 2 max
T dA dA J
c
c
4
J 1 24c c
2
• The results are known as the elastic torsion
max Tc and
formulas,
1
J J
T
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MECHANICS OF MATERIALS
Edition
Fourth
Beer • Johnston • DeWolf
max L
• In thecelastic range,
the shearing strain and shear
are related by Hooke’s Law,
max
max Tc
G JG
• Equating the expressions for shearing strain and solving for
the angle of twist,
TL
JG
• If the torsional loading or shaft cross-section
changes along the length, the angle of rotation is found as
the sum of segment rotations
TL
i i
The maximum torque transmitted by a circular solid shaft, is obtained from the
maximum shear stress induced at the outer surface of the solid shaft.
Consider a shaft, subjected to a torque T as shown in Fig.
Area of ring
_______________(B)
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specifications without Tc
max J
exceeding allowable shearing J 3 T solid
c
stress. c 2
max shafts
J 4
24
c T hollow
c2
c
2c2
1
shafts
max
power generated by the machine and the angular speed of the shaft
Work done
Power transferred
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Fourth
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T T dM 0 2q dA 2qA
2tA
• Angle of twist (from Chapter 11)
TL ds
4 A2G t
Assumptions
The tube is cylindrical in shape—that is,
all cross sections are identical and the
longitudinal axis is a straight line.
Lets take small element of The thickness t of the wall is not
necessarily constant but may vary
around the cross section.
However, the thickness must be small in
comparison with the total width of the
tube.
The tube is subjected to pure torsion by
torques T acting at the ends.
To determine the magnitude of the shear stresses, we will
consider a rectangular element abcd obtained by making two
longitudinal cuts ab and cd This product is known as
the shear flow and is
denoted by the letter f:
The area Am is the area enclosed by the median line—it is not the cross-
sectional area of the tube.
Consider now an axial strip of the tube, of length L, along which the
thickness and hence the shear stress is constant. The shear strain energy per
unit volume is given by