The hockling of cables: a problem in shearable and extensible rods
โ Scribed by D.M. Stump
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 222 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7683
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โฆ Synopsis
In certain industrial processes, such as undersea cable laying, a very long rod subject to remote axial tension and torque can form a self-contacting loop. An increase in remote tension under a ยฎxed torque can draw the loop down in size until it becomes very small and then pulls apart. The very large local strains of the small loop can permanently damage the rod (e.g. through plastic deformation). In the cable laying industry, this process is known as hockling.
This study uses the theory of linear elastic rods which can undergo shear and extensional deformations in addition to bending and twisting curvatures in order to solve approximately for the shape, force, and moments that occur during hockling. A new closed-form solution to the rod theory equations is developed and used to predict (at least approximately) the loops sizes and remote tensions that occur at the formation and pull apart of the contacting loop.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
An approximate method of determining the critical loads in problems of the stability of compressed rods has been extended to statically indeterminate systems. For this purpose, a method has been developed for solving stability problems when there are extraneous unknowns defined by the stationarity c