Thick Cylinders free study notes

1. Introduction to Thick Cylinders

A thick cylinder is a pressure vessel in which the wall thickness is not negligible compared to its diameter. These cylinders are commonly used where high internal pressures exist, such as:

  • Gun barrels
  • Hydraulic presses
  • High-pressure pipes
  • Cylinders in power plants

Unlike thin cylinders, stresses in thick cylinders vary across the thickness, so simple formulas cannot be used.

2. Definition of Thick Cylinder

A cylinder is considered thick if:td>110\frac{t}{d} > \frac{1}{10}

Where:

  • ttt = thickness
  • ddd = internal diameter

3. Types of Stresses in Thick Cylinder

When subjected to internal and/or external pressure, three stresses develop:

(a) Radial Stress (ฯƒr\sigma_rฯƒrโ€‹)

  • Acts perpendicular to the surface
  • Varies from maximum at inner surface to minimum at outer surface

(b) Hoop Stress (ฯƒฮธ\sigma_\thetaฯƒฮธโ€‹)

  • Acts tangentially
  • Maximum at inner surface
  • Decreases towards outer surface

(c) Longitudinal Stress (ฯƒl\sigma_lฯƒlโ€‹)

  • Acts along the axis
  • Usually constant across thickness (for closed ends)

4. Lameโ€™s Theory of Thick Cylinders

To determine stress distribution, Lameโ€™s equations are used.

General Equations

ฯƒr=Aโˆ’Br2\sigma_r = A – \frac{B}{r^2}ฯƒrโ€‹=Aโˆ’r2Bโ€‹

ฯƒฮธ=A+Br2\sigma_\theta = A + \frac{B}{r^2}ฯƒฮธโ€‹=A+r2Bโ€‹

Where:

  • ฯƒr\sigma_rฯƒrโ€‹ = radial stress
  • ฯƒฮธ\sigma_\thetaฯƒฮธโ€‹ = hoop stress
  • rrr = radius at any point
  • A,BA, BA,B = constants determined from boundary conditions

5. Boundary Conditions

To find constants AAA and BBB:

Case 1: Internal Pressure Only

  • At inner radius rir_iriโ€‹: ฯƒr=โˆ’pi\sigma_r = -p_iฯƒrโ€‹=โˆ’piโ€‹
  • At outer radius ror_oroโ€‹: ฯƒr=0\sigma_r = 0ฯƒrโ€‹=0

Case 2: Internal and External Pressure

  • At rir_iriโ€‹: ฯƒr=โˆ’pi\sigma_r = -p_iฯƒrโ€‹=โˆ’piโ€‹
  • At ror_oroโ€‹: ฯƒr=โˆ’po\sigma_r = -p_oฯƒrโ€‹=โˆ’poโ€‹

(Negative sign indicates compressive stress)

6. Maximum Stresses

Maximum Hoop Stress

  • Occurs at inner surface

ฯƒฮธ,max=A+Bri2\sigma_{\theta,\text{max}} = A + \frac{B}{r_i^2}ฯƒฮธ,maxโ€‹=A+ri2โ€‹Bโ€‹

Minimum Hoop Stress

  • Occurs at outer surface

ฯƒฮธ,min=A+Bro2\sigma_{\theta,\text{min}} = A + \frac{B}{r_o^2}ฯƒฮธ,minโ€‹=A+ro2โ€‹Bโ€‹

7. Stress Distribution Characteristics

  • Radial stress is compressive and decreases outward
  • Hoop stress is tensile and maximum at inner surface
  • Stress variation is non-linear (parabolic)
  • Maximum failure risk is at inner surface

8. Longitudinal Stress (Closed Cylinder)

For cylinders with closed ends:ฯƒl=piri2โˆ’poro2ro2โˆ’ri2\sigma_l = \frac{p_i r_i^2 – p_o r_o^2}{r_o^2 – r_i^2}ฯƒlโ€‹=ro2โ€‹โˆ’ri2โ€‹piโ€‹ri2โ€‹โˆ’poโ€‹ro2โ€‹โ€‹

9. Compound Cylinders

To withstand very high pressures, cylinders are sometimes made of multiple layers (compound cylinders).

Purpose:

  • Reduce maximum hoop stress
  • Increase strength
  • Improve safety

Method:

  • Shrink fitting outer cylinder over inner cylinder
  • Induces compressive stress at inner surface

10. Failure Theories Applied

Design of thick cylinders uses:

  • Maximum principal stress theory
  • Maximum shear stress theory
  • Distortion energy theory

11. Applications

  • Hydraulic cylinders
  • Gun barrels
  • Pressure vessels
  • High-pressure pumps
  • Nuclear reactors

12. Comparison: Thin vs Thick Cylinder

FeatureThin CylinderThick Cylinder
Stress distributionUniformVaries across thickness
Radial stressNegligibleSignificant
Formula usedSimpleLameโ€™s equations
Thickness ratiot/dโ‰ค1/10t/d \leq 1/10t/dโ‰ค1/10t/d>1/10t/d > 1/10t/d>1/10
AccuracyApproximateMore accurate

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