Mechanical Engineering Principles

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112 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING PRINCIPLES

Now try the following exercise


Exercise 45 Further problems on work
done and power transmitted
by a constant torque


  1. A constant force of 4 kN is applied tan-
    gentially to the rim of a pulley wheel of
    diameter 1.8 m attached to a shaft. Deter-
    mine the work done, in joules, in 15 rev-
    olutions of the pulley wheel. [339.3 kJ]

  2. A motor connected to a shaft develops a
    torque of 3.5 kN m. Determine the num-
    ber of revolutions made by the shaft if the
    work done is 11.52 MJ. [523.8 rev]

  3. A wheel is turning with an angular veloc-
    ity of 18 rad/s and develops a power of
    810 W at this speed. Determine the torque
    developed by the wheel. [45 N m]

  4. Calculate the torque provided at the shaft
    of an electric motor that develops an out-
    put power of 3.2 hp at 1800 rev/min.
    [12.66 N m]

  5. Determine the angular velocity of a shaft
    when the power available is 2.75 kW and
    the torque is 200 N m. [13.75 rad/s]

  6. The drive shaft of a ship supplies a torque
    of 400 kN m to its propeller at 400
    rev/min. Determine the power delivered
    by the shaft. [16.76 MW]

  7. A motor is running at 1460 rev/min and
    produces a torque of 180 N m. Deter-
    mine the average power developed by the
    motor. [27.52 kW]

  8. A wheel is rotating at 1720 rev/min and
    develops a power of 600 W at this speed.
    Calculate (a) the torque, (b) the work done,
    in joules, in a quarter of an hour.


[(a) 3.33 N m (b) 540 kJ]


  1. A force of 60 N is applied to a lever of
    a screw-jack at a radius of 220 mm. If
    the lever makes 25 revolutions, determine
    (a) the work done on the jack, (b) the
    power, if the time taken to complete 25
    revolutions is 40 s.
    [(a) 2.073 kJ (b) 51.84 W]


9.3 Kinetic energy and moment of


inertia


The tangential velocityvof a particle of massm
moving at an angular velocityωrad/s at a radiusr
metres (see Figure 9.4) is given by:

v=ωr m/s

r

ω

m

v

Figure 9.4

The kinetic energy of a particle of mass m is
given by:

Kinetic energy=^12 mv^2 (from Chapter 14)

=^12 m(ωr)^2 =^12 mω^2 r^2 joules

The total kinetic energy of a system of masses
rotating at different radii about a fixed axis but with
the same angular velocity, as shown in Figure 9.5,
is given by:

Total kinetic energy =

1
2

m 1 ω^2 r 12 +

1
2

m 2 ω^2 r 22

+

1
2

m 3 ω^2 r 32

=(m 1 r 12 +m 2 r 22 +m 3 r 32 )

ω^2
2

r 2

r 1

r 3 m 3

m 2

m 1
ω

Figure 9.5
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