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.
Table of Contents
2. Definition of Thick Cylinder
A cylinder is considered thick if:
Where:
- t = thickness
- d = internal diameter
3. Types of Stresses in Thick Cylinder
When subjected to internal and/or external pressure, three stresses develop:
(a) Radial Stress (ฯr\sigma_rฯrโ)
- Acts perpendicular to the surface
- Varies from maximum at inner surface to minimum at outer surface
(b) Hoop Stress (ฯฮธ\sigma_\thetaฯฮธโ)
- Acts tangentially
- Maximum at inner surface
- Decreases towards outer surface
(c) Longitudinal Stress (ฯl\sigma_lฯlโ)
- Acts along the axis
- Usually constant across thickness (for closed ends)
4. Lameโs Theory of Thick Cylinders
To determine stress distribution, Lameโs equations are used.
General Equations
ฯrโ=Aโr2Bโ
ฯฮธโ=A+r2Bโ
Where:
- ฯrโ = radial stress
- ฯฮธโ = hoop stress
- r = radius at any point
- A,B = constants determined from boundary conditions
5. Boundary Conditions
To find constants A and B:
Case 1: Internal Pressure Only
- At inner radius riโ: ฯrโ=โpiโ
- At outer radius roโ: ฯrโ=0
Case 2: Internal and External Pressure
- At riโ: ฯrโ=โpiโ
- At roโ: ฯrโ=โpoโ
(Negative sign indicates compressive stress)
6. Maximum Stresses
Maximum Hoop Stress
- Occurs at inner surface
ฯฮธ,maxโ=A+ri2โBโ
Minimum Hoop Stress
- Occurs at outer surface
ฯฮธ,minโ=A+ro2โBโ
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:ฯlโ=ro2โโri2โpiโri2โโpoโro2โโ
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
| Feature | Thin Cylinder | Thick Cylinder |
|---|---|---|
| Stress distribution | Uniform | Varies across thickness |
| Radial stress | Negligible | Significant |
| Formula used | Simple | Lameโs equations |
| Thickness ratio | t/dโค1/10 | t/d>1/10 |
| Accuracy | Approximate | More accurate |