New United States Army Centrifuge Structurally Analyzed with
the Help of Algor Software
The centrifuge, diagrammed above, is located at the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station in Vicksburg,
Mississippi. It is currently being commissioned and will be used
for geotechnical, structural, hydraulic, environmental, cold regions
and coastal engineering research.
Gary Butler of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Vicksburg,
Mississippi, has been using Algor software as part of ongoing
stress analysis of the new U.S. Army Centrifuge.
The U.S. Army Centrifuge has a radius of 6.5 meters a design performance
envelope that includes a maximum payload carrying capacity of
8,000 kg (17,600 lb) at 143 g and 2,000 kg (4,400 lb) at 350 g.
At maximum g-levels, this centrifuge is designed to operate at
speeds of 240 RPMs while maintaining the safest of operating conditions.
The U.S. Army Centrifuge and its laboratory facility will be operated
by the engineers at the Waterways Experiment Station (WES), and
will be used for geotechnical, structural, hydraulic, environmental,
cold regions and coastal engineering research.
The Testing Platform
A critical component of the U.S. Army Centrifuge is its swinging
platform. The platform's function is to carry the testing apparatus
during centrifuge operation. As enumerated earlier, these payloads
may reach masses up to 8000 kg. During centrifuge operation, the
force transmitted to the platform from the payload increases proportionally
with the rotational g-level.
Due to these enormous forces, a routine structural stress analysis
of the platform is performed before most tests. A finite element
model of the platform was developed to enable WES engineers to
make a quick evaluation of its structural integrity under specific
loading conditions before any centrifuge testing begins. Results
of all analyses are documented and stored for future reference.
The centrifuge platform is analyzed for each experiment. The
picture to the right shows the complete platform model. On the
left is a quarter section analyzed with appropriate boundary conditions.
Physical Modeling
The Waterways Experiment Station has been involved in the use
of centrifuge testing for several decades. Initially, centrifuge
testing was applied primarily in the area of weapons effects,
but has since been employed to assess a variety of engineer problems
such as liquification, erosion and earthquakes.
For example, scientists construct testing packages that contain
scaled models of the structure in question. These packages may
also contain soil, rock and water. The centrifuge experiment may
replicate what would happen to the structure during an earthquake
or embankment failure. The engineers can then extrapolate to make
predictions about real-world cases. Other experiments may be conducted
to determine how long pollution may take to "migrate"
into a water source, or the rate at which a coastline erodes.
In many cases, full-scale testing of an environmental system is
expensive and time consuming. Centrifuge testing offers a feasible
alternative to this process by scaling the important factors such
as size and time.
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