Deformation analysis of railgun cross-section/Elektromagnetines saudykles skersinio pjuvio deformaciju tyrimas.
Gildutis, P. ; Kacianauskas, R. ; Schneider, M. 等
1. Introduction
Electromagnetic accelerators cover a wide range of applications.
They can be used to accelerate very large masses up to modest velocities
below 100 m/s (e.g. aircraft launch systems, [1]) and there exist also
accelerator types, which are able to accelerate small masses (some
grams) up to more than 6 km/s [2]. This article deals with an
accelerator type, known in the literature as railgun, which works in the
range from several hundred grams up to some kilograms and reaches
velocities in excess of 2 km/s. Research on railguns has a strong
multidisciplinary character including electromagnetic, thermal and
mechanical phenomena. Enormous current densities, high velocities of
moving forces coupled with the dynamical interaction at the rail surface
present a great challenge. Advances in electromagnetic launch science
and technology can be found in review papers [3, 4].
A typical railgun facility comprises the accelerator, the
projectile including a conducting armature and an electric energy
source. The electric circuit is formed by the source, the rails and the
sliding contact between the latter realized by the armatures. The strong
currents used result in strong Lorentz forces on conducting materials,
in particular the projectile is accelerated by the Lorentz-force acting
on the armatures. It is guided by the rails in one direction and by
insulating parts in the other (see below). The rails have to withstand
strong repelling Lorentz forces. Experimentally realized railgun setups
differ with respect to the structure of the rails and the housing [5,
6].
The mechanical response of the railgun structure to the magnetic
forces acting on the rails became recently one of the biggest challenges
encountered in designing and researching electromagnetic railguns,
because rail deformation can influence the crucial sliding contact
performance of the armature. Therefore, evaluation of the deflections of
the inner rail surfaces considered hereafter is a mandatory task for
future systems.
However, in order to investigate the rail deformation, the
electromechanic problem can be decoupled in to a mechanical one and a
electromagnetic one. The electromagnetic forces enter the mechanical
calculations in form of boundary conditions [7].
The transient elastic waves in electromagnetic launchers and their
influence on armature contact pressure were studied by Johnson and Moon
[8, 9]. Actually, in their coupled rail-armature FE model the rail was
considered as a beam, while the armature was discretize by quadrilateral
elements.
Probably, the simplest model treats the rail as one-dimensional
beam on an elastic foundation. Analytical treatment of the beam under
moving point loads and the simplest solutions are presented in the book
by Fryba [10]. An analytical approach to investigate the dynamic
response of laboratory railguns including projectile movement was
developed in series of works by Tzeng [11] and Tzeng and Sun [12]. The
rail was modelled as cantilever beam on an elastic foundation.
It is obvious that a better understanding of the structural
behaviour of the railgun can be achieved through modelling and computer
simulation, as it enables to obtain detailed quantitative information.
In particular, numerical investigations using the Finite Element Method
(FEM) has became a routine in recent decades. In the ideal case, an
electromechanically coupled 3D finite element model would be
appropriate.
It is worth to notice, that the use of the 3D solid FE models in
the multifield analysis is very expensive and not always reasonable.
Consequently, a balance between the accuracy and the cost should be
found.
Transient resonance at critical velocities of the projectile was
numerically studied by Lewis and Nechitailo [13]. There, axis-symmetric
shell and two-dimensional solid models were used to simulate the railgun
presented in the form of a tube.
Electromagnetic launchers have been extensively investigated at the
French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis (ISL), where specific
types of railguns, characterized by the use of discrete supports, have
been developed [14, 15]. In order to withstand the high forces repelling
the rails from each other, the housing consists of a combination of bars
of glass fiber reinforced plastic (GRP) material and symmetrically
located steel bolts representing the discrete supports.
At present time, research on electromagnetic devices is continued
in cooperation with the Vilnius High Magnetic Field Centre, Lithuania
[16]. Here, various applications of the FEM including linear actuators
[17], destructive coils [18, 19] were considered.
Dynamic behaviour of the ISL railgun EMA3 under uniformly
distributed load moving with various velocities was studied in [20-23].
Therewith, a longitudinal 2D plane stress finite element model, resting
upon discrete elastic supports, was developed to represent the complex
bar. The model is able to capture bending and shear effects described
conventionally by beam models, as well as pinching deformation of the
solid cross-section.
This paper presents the first results in a series of research
efforts aiming to perform numerical modelling of the electromagnetic gun
RAFIRA (RApid FIre RAilgun) [24, 25] of ISL. The development of a
reliable simplified FE model is the final goal of this investigation.
This paper deals with the understanding and the illustration of
cross-sectional deformation behaviour under static and dynamic loading.
The outline of the paper is as follows. Section 2 presents the
description of the rail gun problem. Section 3 describes the modelling
approach. Numerical results are discussed in section 4. Conclusions are
drawn in sections 5 and 6.
2. Railgun--structure and basic data
The ISL--railgun RAFIRA has an acceleration length L of 3.1 m. A
schematic 3D view of the railgun structure is presented in Fig. 1. The
whole structure is designed to withstand the high forces repelling the
rails from each other during the motion of the projectile between the
rails. The barrel consists of two bars of rectangular section connected
with 160 steel bolts M18, which are located in four rows as shown in
Fig. 1. The bolts are inserted into the insulators, which are
manufactured from electrically nonconductive composite materials and
stowed among the bar. Rails are fixed to the frame with hexagonal bolts.
The view and the main data of cross-section A-A presented in Fig.
2. Here, all lengths are given in millimeters. The height of section is
H = 225, the width W = 200. The section of the bar is defined by the
width which is equal to W, while the height is h = 80. The M18 bolt is
defined by diameter D = 18 and the washer by diameter d = 36. The
section of the rail is defined by width [W.sub.R] = 25 and height
[H.sub.R] = 20. The bolt location is described by value [S.sub.d] =
27.5.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Materials and their mechanical characteristics of individual parts
of the mechanism are the same as the EMA-3 railgun [20]: bolt
manufactured from steel alloy (density - [[rho].sub.bolt] = 7.85
g/[cm.sup.3], elasticity modulus - [E.sub.bolt] = = 210 GPa,
Poisson's ratio - [v.sub.bolt] = 0.30), rail -
copper-chromium-zirconium alloy, CuCr1Zr ([[rho].sub.rail] = 8.90
g/[cm.sup.3], [E.sub.rail] = 120 GPa, [v.sub.rail] = 0.30), bar--from
composite, EPM 203 ([[rho].sub.bar] = 1.85 g/[cm.sup.3], [E.sub.bar] =
18.0 GPa, [v.sub.bar] = 0.30).
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
3. FE model and analysis
As mentioned above, the structural analysis of the railgun system
can be decoupled from electromagnetic phenomena at the first stage and
therefore purely mechanical calculations are to be performed. The
railgun housing dynamics will also be treated as being independent from
the projectile behaviour. Considering plane symmetry of the barrel, only
one half of its cross-section can be investigated. Thus, the load
carrying structure of the railgun presents solid slender bar while
fastening bolts may be treated as discrete elastic supports.
It is commonly agreed that the deflections of the sliding surface
is a consequence of the complex interaction of various deformation
modes. Therefore, contributions of the global longitudinal deformation
modes are assumed to be dominating in the total response of the whole
structure. The one-dimensional beam with undeformable cross-sections
applied in the earliest developments [22] is an example for a purely
global approach.
In reality, the transversal distortion of the cross-section is
generally of 3D nature. To avoid the detailed three-dimensional analysis
further simplifications could be used.
Our suggestion is based on the assumed orthogonality of
longitudinal and transversal deformation modes. Taking into account the
length and size ratio L/W = 3.1/0.2 = 15.5 transversal deformation is
considered as plane strain problem. Consequently, the T-shaped
bimaterial cross-section of the bar-prism will be treated as 2D solution
domain.
The computational model of the railgun section applied hereafter
for static and transient analysis is shown in Fig. 3. The sketch shows a
vertically symmetric composition of two rectangles, the bar and the
rail. The bar section is defined as W x h = 200 x 80 [mm.sup.2] while
the rail is characterized as [W.sub.r] x [H.sub.r] = 25 x 20 [mm.sup.2].
Two section bolts are considered as elastic supports. To avoid
local concentration in connection, each of bolts has been replaced by
the set of five identical elastic springs with length equal to a half of
the section height H/2 = 112.5 mm as shown in Fig. 2. Location of the
middle spring coincides with the central axis of the bolts and defined
by distance [S.sub.d] = 27.5. The remainder four springs are uniformly
located across the diameter d of the bush-washing with distance d/4 = 9
mm from each other.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
The loading of the structure corresponds to the magnetic pressure
caused by the strong currents following the moving projectile, while
local transversal contact forces caused by the projectile (armature) are
neglected. As a result, the transient loading profile represents the
magnetic pressure q(x, t) at an arbitrary point x moving in time t with
the velocity v(t). In the static case a constant pressure q = const is
assumed.
Numerical simulation is carried out using the FEM program ANSYS
[26]. Two-dimensional domains comprising the rail and the bar are
covered by 8 node plane finite elements--Plane183 with 2 DOF per node.
The element contains large deflection, large strain and dynamic
capability.
The spring type Link1 finite elements with 2 DOF per node are
applied for modelling of bolts. The element contains not only linear but
also
large deflection capabilities. The spring elements are connected to a
rigid plane while spring-structure connection nodes are constrained in
horizontal x direction. The axial stiffness of the spring assembly
reflects stiffness of the entire bolt as a whole. Available deformation
of the bolt threads [27] is not taken into account. Distributed springs
additionally evaluate the local bending of the bolts. Finally, each of
individual spring is defined by the section area equal to 5.6677 x
[10.sup.-5] [m.sup.2].
A combined irregular-structured automatically generated FE mesh was
used. To test the influence of the mesh density, a convergence study was
performed. The five meshes denoted by Mesh 1 up to Mesh 5 with 178, 275,
579, 1594 and 4836 finite elements were examined. The coarsest and the
densest mesh are given in Fig. 4. The, locations of the supports are
fixed and remain independent from the mesh refinement.
During the convergence test, a static pressure p = 31.2 MPa is
applied on the inner surface of the rail as it is shown in Fig. 3. The
maximal displacement of the point S on the sliding surface [u.sub.S] is
chosen as convergence criterion and examined below. It comprises
displacement due to local deformation of the structure and due to
elongations of the bolts.
Simulation results of static loading cases are presented in Table
1. As expected, elongations of bolts expressed by the displacement of
the support [u.sub.A] do not depend on the mesh density. In summary, a
relatively coarse mesh seems to be sufficiently accurate to describe the
deformation behaviour of the cross-section.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Since the results obtained for various mesh densities do not differ
significantly, further calculations we made using the numerical model
with 579 finite elements.
4. Investigation of static loading
The main aim of the study presented here is the investigation of
the transversal deformation modes which were neglected in the previously
published works [18-21]. Hypothetical statements about the possible
deformation modes were suggested and three deformation modes were
examined. They are:
* deformation of the elastic support defined as elongation of
bolts;
* transversal bending;
* axial deformation (pinching) of the section under compression.
In order to characterise the deformation behaviour of the sliding
surface notation [DELTA] will be employed hereafter to characterise the
deformation behaviour. The total deformation of the section which
characterises displacement of the sliding surface is defined by
displacement of the central point S: [[DELTA].sub.total] = [u.sub.S]
(Fig. 5). The displacement [u.sub.S] as well as in other points are
extracted from the FE computations.
It is evaluated as result of the three deformation modes mentioned
above plus an error term [[DELTA].sub.err] reflecting possible undefined
effects. Explicitly, the displacement of S becomes
[[DELTA].sub.total] = [[DELTA].sub.bolt] + [[DELTA].sub.bend] +
[[DELTA].sub.bar] + [[DELTA].sub.rail] + [[DELTA].sub.err] (1)
The elongation of the bolt [[DELTA].sub.bolt] is simply defined by
displacement of the central point A (2) of the support as
[[DELTA].sub.bolt], = [u.sub.A] (2)
The axial deformation (pinching) of the rail and bar sections can
be defined by displacement differences of the points B, C and S as
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (3)
Transversal bending is characterised by deflection of the plane
section assumed to be simply supported beam. It could be measured by
deflection [w.sub.B] of the point B (4). Finally, the displacement of
the sliding surface due to transversal bending [[DELTA].sub.bend] may be
extracted as
[[DELTA].sub.bend] = [w.sub.B] = [u.sub.B] - [u.sub.A] (4)
Linear and nonlinear large displacement analysis problems were
considered under action of static pressure p = 31.2 MPa applied in the
simulation.
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
Results of a linear static simulation are graphically presented in
Fig. 6.
[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]
To understand the deformation behaviour of the section, the linear
and geometrically nonlinear static analysis was preformed. Contributions
of the deformation modes according to expressions (1)-(4) were analysed
while results of linear and nonlinear static analysis are compared in
Table 2 and graphically illustrated in Fig. 7. The first observation is
that differences between both approaches are insignificant. Results
confirm that because of the high stiffness of the bars the influence of
geometric nonlinearity, i.e. of deformed shape, is negligibly small.
[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]
Moreover, the data clearly shows that the largest, approximately
88%, contribution of the sliding surface displacement is due to the
elongation of bolts while the influence of transversal bending
comprising 7.5% is also important.
Simulation results processed according to expression (3) clearly
demonstrate the contribution of the axial deformation of the section
structure under compression. On the other hand, variation of the normal
stresses shown in Fig. 6 demonstrates 2D character which can not be
explained by simple compression. Mechanical interpretation of this
effect will be given below. Theoretically, normal deformation of the
section [[DELTA].sub.BS], i.e. change of the distance between points B
and S, may be evaluated as
[[DELTA].sub.BS] = [[DELTA].sub.bar,t] + [[DELTA].sub.rail,t] +
[[DELTA].sub.int] (5)
The above terms comprise contributions of the rail
[[DELTA].sub.rail,t] and the bar [[DELTA].sub.bar,t]. The third term
[[DELTA].sub.int] indicates interpenetration of the rail into the bar
because deformation of contacting layers.
The first two terms of Eq. (5) can be evaluated analytically as
elongation of the axially compressed rod
[[DELTA].sub.rail,t] = [p[W.sub.r] x 1 x
[H.sub.r]]/[[E.sub.rail][W.sub.r] x 1] (6)
[[DELTA].sub.bar,t] = [p[W.sub.r] x 1 x h]/[[E.sub.bar] W x 1] (7)
The interpenetration [[DELTA].sub.int] is calculated on the basis
of numerical results.
Detailed analysis of the section deformation according to Eqs.
(5)-(7) shows that the deformation mode characterised as pinching of the
bar-rail structure is considerably contributed by interpenetration of
the rail into the bar. It was found that [[DELTA].sub.int] = 0.01283 mm
yields about 37% of the bar-rail section deformation [[DELTA].sub.bar,t]
+ [[DELTA].sub.rail,t] = 0.03458 mm, while its contribution to the total
deformation of the whole section comprises up to 1.5% of
[[DELTA].sub.total] = 0.833 mm as given in Table 2. This effect was
neglected in the earlier 2D models [20-23].
Finally, it should be noted that the error term [[DELTA].sub.err]
in expression (1) turned out to be negligibly small. This indicates that
the chosen deformation model uses the appropriate deformation modes.
5. Dynamic time history analysis
The dynamic time history analysis was performed to consider
deformation behaviour of the railgun section. The real loading of the
railgun presents a transient pressure profile moving along the sliding
surface with the projectile velocities up to 1600 m/s. The maximal
pressure value p = 31.2 MPa.
Solving a linear dynamic task, the load is acting on the rail. This
load in our model is presented as follows. We assume that the moving
maximal pressure crosses a section slice of unit (1 mm) thickness as it
used in plane strain analysis. Thus the crossing dynamic load should
increase from zero and reaches its maximal value. In our case, the
maximal pressure value was reached during 1.25 ms and remains constant.
In our model the loading history imitates the shock load which is frozen
after reaching its maximum.
Simulation results are presented in terms of displacements.
Variation of displacement in time is presented in Fig. 8. Comparisons of
maximum values of nonlinear dynamic displacements with static results
are given in Table 3.
[FIGURE 8 OMITTED]
Result shows that dynamic load increase section deformation by the
factor approximately equal 2. The relative contribution of various
deformation modes approximately equivalent to the static behaviour.
On the other hand, time variation illustrate that each deformation
mode are characterised by difference in period, therefore detailed
frequency analysis is required to understand deformations of the real
structure.
6. Concluding remarks
The transversal deformation behaviour of the existing rail gun
structure under action of static and dynamic loading was analyzed on the
basis of plane strain formulation using the finite element method. The
presented results illustrate qualitatively and quantitatively in-plane
flexibility of the bar as whole while role of particular deformation
modes is clearly distinguished. The most important findings are
summarised as follows.
* Normal displacement of the sliding surface due to deformation of
section of the entire section is basically attributed to the tension of
the bolts providing 88% of the total value. Contribution of the
transversal bending characterised by central deflection is of 7.5% while
deformation of the bar section under compression contains up to 3.8%.
* Dynamic contribution of moving load is characterised by factor
approximately equal 2.
This study forms the base for the future development of a 3D model
allowing to investigate the influence of mesh density and particular
deformation effects.
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P. Gildutis *, R. Kacianauskas **, M. Schneider ***, E. Stupak
****, R. Stonkus *****
* Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Sauletekio 11, 10223
Vilnius, Lithuania, E-mail:
[email protected]
** Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Sauletekio 11, 10223
Vilnius, Lithuania, E-mail:
[email protected]
*** French-German Research Institute of Saint Louis (ISL), 5 rue
G'al Cassagnou, 68301 Saint-Louis, France, E-mail:
[email protected]
**** Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Sauletekio 11, 10223
Vilnius, Lithuania, E-mail:
[email protected]
***** Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Sauletekio 11, 10223
Vilnius, Lithuania, E-mail:
[email protected]
doi: 10.5755/j01.mech.18.3.1877
Table 1
Displacements of railgun under various density of mesh
Parameters Mesh 1 Mesh 2 Mesh 3 Mesh 4 Mesh 5
Number of
plane 178 275 579 1594 4836
elements
Number of DOF 1116 1738 3626 9086 29632
Total
displacement 0.832 0.832 0.833 0.835 0.837
[u.sub.S], mm
[u.sub.A], mm 0.735 0.735 0.735 0.735 0.735
Table 2
Contributions of various deformation modes to sliding
surface displacement obtained by static analysis
Deformation mode Displacements, mm Relative
contribution
Linear static Nonlinear
[[DELTA].sub.total] 0.833 0.833 100%
[[DELTA].sub.bolt] 0.735 0.735 88.2%
[[DELTA].sub.bend] 0.06289 0.06273 7.5%
[[DELTA].sub.rail] 0.00367 0.00314 0.5%
[[DELTA].sub.bar] 0.03144 0.03144 3.8%
Table 3
Comparison of various deformation modes to sliding
displacement obtained by static and dynamic analysis
Deforma-tion mode Max. displacements, mm
Linear static Linear dynamic
analysis analysis
[[DELTA].sub.total] 0.833 1.629
[[DELTA].sub.bolt] 0.735 1.485
[[DELTA].sub.bend] 0.06289 0.126
[[DELTA].sub.rail] 0.00367 0.00359
[[DELTA].sub.bar] 0.03144 0.01452