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    Corrugation and Buckling Defects in Wound Rolls

    Source: Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering:;2006:;volume( 128 ):;issue: 001::page 56
    Author:
    P. M. Lin
    ,
    J. A. Wickert
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2113068
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Sheet metal, paper, and polymer webs are often stored and processed as large rolls comprising thousands of layers. Depending on the elastic properties of the web material, the roll’s dimensions, the type of core, and the winding tension, the stresses that develop within the roll can be sufficiently high to cause local or gross buckling defects to form. For instance, the cylindrical core onto which the web is wound can collapse, a failure mode that is termed “v-buckling.” In other cases, while the core might remain intact, a group of layers interior to the roll can wrinkle into a near-sinusoidal corrugated pattern around the circumference. This paper examines such “starring” defects analytically and experimentally. Measurements on a laboratory-scale web transport system are used to validate the model, and to identify conditions where no defects occur and the roll has acceptable quality, where starring patterns develop, and where v-buckling occurs. For particular core and web materials, the tension and diameter are the primary variables that influence the roll’s stability, and demarcations between stable and buckled configurations are identified in the tension-diameter design space. A model for the elastic stability of the roll-core system is developed, in which the corrugated layers are treated as multiple rings subjected to the resultant pressure generated by the roll’s internal stresses, and to the elastic support provided by the core and neighboring web layers. At the onset of corrugation, adjacent web layers couple through surface contact which is incorporated in the model as an elastic shear layer.
    keyword(s): Pressure , Product quality , Stress , Buckling , Tension , Winding (process) , Shear (Mechanics) AND Dimensions ,
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      Corrugation and Buckling Defects in Wound Rolls

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/134200
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    contributor authorP. M. Lin
    contributor authorJ. A. Wickert
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:20:47Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:20:47Z
    date copyrightFebruary, 2006
    date issued2006
    identifier issn1087-1357
    identifier otherJMSEFK-27914#56_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/134200
    description abstractSheet metal, paper, and polymer webs are often stored and processed as large rolls comprising thousands of layers. Depending on the elastic properties of the web material, the roll’s dimensions, the type of core, and the winding tension, the stresses that develop within the roll can be sufficiently high to cause local or gross buckling defects to form. For instance, the cylindrical core onto which the web is wound can collapse, a failure mode that is termed “v-buckling.” In other cases, while the core might remain intact, a group of layers interior to the roll can wrinkle into a near-sinusoidal corrugated pattern around the circumference. This paper examines such “starring” defects analytically and experimentally. Measurements on a laboratory-scale web transport system are used to validate the model, and to identify conditions where no defects occur and the roll has acceptable quality, where starring patterns develop, and where v-buckling occurs. For particular core and web materials, the tension and diameter are the primary variables that influence the roll’s stability, and demarcations between stable and buckled configurations are identified in the tension-diameter design space. A model for the elastic stability of the roll-core system is developed, in which the corrugated layers are treated as multiple rings subjected to the resultant pressure generated by the roll’s internal stresses, and to the elastic support provided by the core and neighboring web layers. At the onset of corrugation, adjacent web layers couple through surface contact which is incorporated in the model as an elastic shear layer.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleCorrugation and Buckling Defects in Wound Rolls
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume128
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2113068
    journal fristpage56
    journal lastpage64
    identifier eissn1528-8935
    keywordsPressure
    keywordsProduct quality
    keywordsStress
    keywordsBuckling
    keywordsTension
    keywordsWinding (process)
    keywordsShear (Mechanics) AND Dimensions
    treeJournal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering:;2006:;volume( 128 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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