Something about the Mechanical Moment of Inertia
- 1 Department of Theory of Mechanisms and Robots, Bucharest Polytechnic University, Bucharest, Romania
- 2 Advanced Material Lab, Department of Architecture and Industrial Design, Second University of Naples, Aversa (CE), Italy
- 3 Department of Transport, Traffic and Logistics, Bucharest Polytechnic University, Bucharest, Romania
- 4 Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
- 5 Second University of Naples, Naples, Italy
Abstract
In this study, the relations to determining mass moments of inertia (mechanical) for different mass and mechanical inertia corresponding to geometric shapes, objects and profiles are explored. The formulas for calculating the mass moments of inertia (mechanical) for various bodies (various geometrical forms), to certain major axis indicated (as the axis of calculation) are presented. The total mass M of the body is used to determine the mass moment of inertia (mechanical). In the first part of the paper, an original method for determining the mass moment of inertia (mechanical) of the flywheel is presented. Mass moment of inertia (the whole mechanism) reduced at the crank (reduced to the element leader) consists in a constant mass inertia moment and one variable, to which we may include an additional mass moment of inertia flywheel, which aims to reduce the degree of unevenness of the mechanism and the default machine. The more the mass moment of inertia of the flywheel is increased the more the unevenness decreased and dynamic functioning of the mechanism is improved. Engineering optimization of these values can be realized through new relationships presented on the second paragraph of the article. Determining of the mass moment of inertia of the flywheel with the new method proposed is also based on the total kinetic energy conservation.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2016.1085.1090
Copyright: © 2016 Florian Ion T. Petrescu, Antonio Apicella, Aversa Raffaella, Relly Victoria Petrescu, John Kaiser Calautit and Aniello Riccio. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Keywords
- Mass Moment of Inertia
- Compute Axis
- Unevenness
- Flywheel Moment of Inertia
- Energy Conservation