Design of shaft

1. What is a Shaft ?

A shaft is a rotating machine element used to transmit power from one part of a machine to another. It supports rotating components like gears, pulleys, flywheels, and sprockets.

Key idea:
A shaft must safely withstand torsion (twisting) and bending loads.

2. Functions of Shaft

  • Transmit power and motion
  • Support rotating machine elements
  • Maintain proper alignment
  • Withstand torsional and bending stresses

3. Types of Shafts

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(a) Transmission Shafts

  • Used to transmit power between source and machine
  • Examples: Line shaft, countershaft

(b) Machine Shafts

  • Integral part of machines
  • Examples: Crankshaft, camshaft

(c) Axles

  • Support rotating elements
  • Do not transmit torque

4. Materials for Shafts

Common materials used:

  • Mild Steel (low cost, good strength)
  • Alloy Steel (high strength, fatigue resistance)
  • Stainless Steel (corrosion resistance)

๐Ÿ‘‰ Properties required:

  • High strength
  • Good fatigue resistance
  • Toughness
  • Machinability

5. Loads Acting on Shaft

A shaft is subjected to:

(a) Torsional Load

  • Due to power transmission
  • Causes shear stress

(b) Bending Load

  • Due to pulleys, gears, weights
  • Causes bending stress

(c) Axial Load (sometimes)

  • Due to thrust forces

6. Design Considerations

While designing a shaft, consider:

  • Strength
  • Rigidity (deflection and twist limits)
  • Fatigue loading
  • Stress concentration (keyways, shoulders)
  • Critical speed
  • Wear and corrosion

7. Torsion Equation

The basic torsion relation is:

TJ=ฯ„R=GฮธL\frac{T}{J} = \frac{\tau}{R} = \frac{G\theta}{L}JTโ€‹=Rฯ„โ€‹=LGฮธโ€‹

Where:

  • TTT = Torque
  • JJJ = Polar moment of inertia
  • ฯ„\tauฯ„ = Shear stress
  • RRR = Radius
  • GGG = Modulus of rigidity
  • ฮธ\thetaฮธ = Angle of twist
  • LLL = Length of shaft

8. Design of Solid Shaft

For a solid circular shaft:T=ฯ€16ฯ„d3T = \frac{\pi}{16} \tau d^3T=16ฯ€โ€‹ฯ„d3

๐Ÿ‘‰ Diameter of shaft:d=(16Tฯ€ฯ„)1/3d = \left(\frac{16T}{\pi \tau}\right)^{1/3}d=(ฯ€ฯ„16Tโ€‹)1/3


9. Design of Hollow Shaft

For a hollow shaft:T=ฯ€16ฯ„(D4โˆ’d4)DT = \frac{\pi}{16} \tau \frac{(D^4 – d^4)}{D}T=16ฯ€โ€‹ฯ„D(D4โˆ’d4)โ€‹

Where:

  • DDD = Outer diameter
  • ddd = Inner diameter

๐Ÿ‘‰ Hollow shafts are lighter and more efficient.


10. Combined Bending and Torsion

When both loads act:

Equivalent Torque:

Te=T2+M2T_e = \sqrt{T^2 + M^2}Teโ€‹=T2+M2โ€‹

Equivalent Bending Moment:

Me=12[M+M2+T2]M_e = \frac{1}{2} \left[M + \sqrt{M^2 + T^2}\right]Meโ€‹=21โ€‹[M+M2+T2โ€‹]

Where:

  • MMM = Bending moment
  • TTT = Torque

11. Shaft Design Based on Strength

  • Use maximum shear stress theory (Guest theory)
  • Ensure:

ฯ„maxโ‰คฯ„allowable\tau_{max} \leq \tau_{allowable}ฯ„maxโ€‹โ‰คฯ„allowableโ€‹


12. Shaft Design Based on Rigidity

Limit angle of twist:ฮธ=TLGJ\theta = \frac{TL}{GJ}ฮธ=GJTLโ€‹

๐Ÿ‘‰ Typical limits:

  • Transmission shaft: โ‰ค 1ยฐ per 20 diameters

13. Stress Concentration

Occurs at:

  • Keyways
  • Shoulders
  • Grooves

๐Ÿ‘‰ Reduced by:

  • Fillets
  • Smooth transitions
  • Proper design

14. Shaft Couplings and Keys

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  • Keys: Connect shaft to rotating elements
  • Couplings: Join two shafts

15. Advantages of Proper Shaft Design

  • Safe power transmission
  • Longer service life
  • Reduced failure
  • Efficient operation

16. Common Failures of Shafts

  • Fatigue failure
  • Torsional shear failure
  • Bending failure
  • Wear and corrosion

17. Applications

  • Automobiles (crankshaft, drive shaft)
  • Machine tools
  • Power transmission systems
  • Industrial machinery

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