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Belleville washer

A Belleville washer, also known as a coned-disc spring,[1] conical spring washer,[2] disc spring, Belleville spring or cupped spring washer, is a conical shell which can be loaded along its axis either statically or dynamically. A Belleville washer is a type of spring shaped like a washer. It is the frusto-conical shape that gives the washer its characteristic spring.

Belleville washer

The "Belleville" name comes from the inventor Julien Belleville who in Dunkerque, France, in 1867 patented a spring design which already contained the principle of the disc spring.[1][3] The real inventor of Belleville washers is unknown.

Through the years, many profiles for disc springs have been developed. Today the most used are the profiles with or without contact flats, while some other profiles, like disc springs with trapezoidal cross-section, have lost importance.

Features and use

 
Cross-sectional view of an M4 anti-tank mine (circa 1945) showing the steel Belleville spring in the fuze mechanism
 
Cut-away view of an M14 antipersonnel landmine, showing the firing pin mounted in the centre of a plastic Belleville spring

In the different fields, if they are used as springs or to apply a flexible pre-load to a bolted joint or bearing, Belleville washers can be used as a single spring or as a stack. In a spring-stack, disc springs can be stacked in the same or in an alternating orientation and of course it is possible to stack packets of multiple springs stacked in the same direction.

Disc springs have a number of advantageous properties compared to other types of springs:[4]

  • Very large loads can be supported with a small installation space,
  • Due to the nearly unlimited number of possible combinations of individual disc springs, the characteristic curve and the column length can be further varied within additional limits,
  • High service life under dynamic load if the spring is properly dimensioned,
  • Provided the permissible stress is not exceeded, no impermissible relaxation occurs,
  • With suitable arrangement, a large damping (high hysteresis) effect may be achieved,
  • Because the springs are of an annular shape, force transmission is absolutely concentric.

Thanks to these advantageous properties, Belleville washers are today used in a large number of fields, some examples are listed in the following.

In the arms industry, Belleville springs are used, for instance, in a number of landmines e.g. the American M19, M15, M14, M1 and the Swedish Tret-Mi.59. The target (a person or vehicle) exerts pressure on the Belleville spring, causing it to exceed a trigger threshold and flip the adjacent firing pin downwards into a stab detonator, firing both it and the surrounding booster charge and main explosive filling.

Belleville washers have been used as return springs in artillery pieces, one example being the French Canet range of marine/coastal cannon from the late 1800s (75 mm, 120 mm, 152 mm).

Some makers of bolt action target rifles use Belleville washer stacks in the bolt instead of a more traditional spring to release the firing pin, as they reduce the time between trigger actuation and firing pin impact on the cartridge.[5]

Belleville washers, without serrations which can harm the clamping surface, have no significant locking capability in bolted applications.[6]

On aircraft (typically experimental aircraft) with wooden propellers, Belleville washers used on the mounting bolts can be useful as an indicator of swelling or shrinkage of the wood. By torquing their associated bolts to provide a specific gap between sets of washers placed with "high ends" facing each other, a change in relative moisture content in the propeller wood will result in a change of the gaps which is often great enough to be detected visually. As propeller balance depends on the weight of blades being equal, a radical difference in the washer gaps may indicate a difference in moisture content – and thus weight – in the adjacent blades.

In the aircraft and automotive industries (including Formula One cars[7][better source needed]) disc springs are used as vibration-damping elements because of their extremely detailed tuning ability. The Cirrus SR2x series of airplanes, uses a Belleville washer setup to damp out nose gear oscillations (or "shimmy").[8]

In the building industry, in Japan stacks of disc springs have been used under buildings as vibration dampers for earthquakes.[9]

Belleville washers are used in some high pressure air regulators, such as those found on paintball markers and air tanks.

Stacking

Multiple Belleville washers may be stacked to modify the spring constant (or spring rate) or the amount of deflection. Stacking in the same direction will add the spring constant in parallel, creating a stiffer joint (with the same deflection). Stacking in an alternating direction is the same as adding common springs in series, resulting in a lower spring constant and greater deflection. Mixing and matching directions allow a specific spring constant and deflection capacity to be designed.

Generally, if n disc springs are stacked in parallel (facing the same direction), standing the load, the deflection of the whole stack is equal to that of one disc spring divided by n, then, to obtain the same deflection of a single disc spring the load to apply has to be n times that of a single disc spring. On the other hand, if n washers are stacked in series (facing in alternating directions), standing the load, the deflection is equal to n times that of one washer while the load to apply at the whole stack to obtain the same deflection of one disc spring has to be that of a single disc spring divided by n.

Performance considerations

In a parallel stack, hysteresis (load losses) will occur due to friction between the springs. The hysteresis losses can be advantageous in some systems because of the added damping and dissipation of vibration energy. This loss due to friction can be calculated using hysteresis methods. Ideally, no more than 4 springs should be placed in parallel. If a greater load is required, then factor of safety must be increased in order to compensate for loss of load due to friction. Friction loss is not as much of an issue in series stacks.

In a series stack, the deflection is not exactly proportional to the number of springs. This is because of a bottoming out effect when the springs are compressed to flat as the contact surface area increases once the spring is deflected beyond 95%. This decreases the moment arm and the spring will offer a greater spring resistance. Hysteresis can be used to calculate predicted deflections in a series stack. The number of springs used in a series stack is not as much of an issue as in parallel stacks even if, generally, the stack height should not be greater than three times the outside diameter of the disc spring. If it is not possible to avoid a longer stack, then it should be divided into 2 or possibly 3 partial stacks with suitable washers. These washers should be guided as exactly as possible.

As previously said, Belleville washers are useful for adjustments because different thicknesses can be swapped in and out and they can be configured to achieve essentially infinite tunability of spring rate while only filling up a small part of the technician's tool box. They are ideal in situations where a heavy spring force is required with minimal free length and compression before reaching solid height. The downside, though, is weight, and they are severely travel limited compared to a conventional coil spring when free length is not an issue.

A wave washer also acts as a spring, but wave washers of comparable size do not produce as much force as Belleville washers, nor can they be stacked in series.

Disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness

For disc springs with a thickness of more than 6.0 mm, DIN 2093 specifies small contact surfaces at points I and III (that is the point where the load is applied and the point where the load touches the ground) in addition to the rounded corners. These contact flats improve definition of the point of load application and, particularly for spring stacks, reduce friction at the guide rod. The result is a considerable reduction in the lever arm length and a corresponding increase in the spring load. This is in turn compensated for by a reduction in the spring thickness.

The reduced thickness is specified in accordance with the following conditions:[4]

  • The overall height remains unaltered,
  • The width of the contact flats (that is the annulus width) is to be approximately 1/150 of the outside diameter,
  • The load applied to the reduced-thickness spring to obtain a deflection equal to the 75% of the free height (of an unreduced spring) must be the same as for an unreduced spring.

As the overall height is not reduced, springs with reduced thickness inevitably have an increased flank angle and a greater cone height than springs of the same nominal dimension without reduced thickness.[4] Therefore, the characteristic curve is altered and becomes completely different.

Calculation

Starting from 1936, when J. O. Almen and A.Làszlò published a simplified method of calculation,[10] always more accurate and complex methods appeared also in order to include in calculations disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness. So, although today there are more accurate methods of calculation,[11] the most used are the simple and convenient formulas of DIN 2092 as, for standard dimensions, they produce values which correspond well to the measured results.

Considering a Belleville washer with outside diameter  , inside diameter  , height   and thickness  , where   is the free height, that is the difference between the height and the thickness, the following coefficients are obtained:

 
 
 
 

The equation to calculate the load to apply to a single disc spring in order to obtain a deflection   is:[12]

 

Note that for disc springs with constant thickness,   is equal to   and consequently   is 1.

For what concerns disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness it has to be said that a paper published in July 2013, demonstrated that the   equation as defined inside the standard norms is not correct as it would result in every reduced thickness being considered right and this is, of course, impossible. As written in that paper   should be replaced with a new coefficient,  , which depends not only from the   ratio but also from the flank angles of the spring.[13]

The spring constant (or spring rate) is defined as:

 
 
Belleville washer stack illustration

If friction and bottoming-out effects are ignored, the spring rate of a stack of identical Belleville washers can be quickly approximated. Counting from one end of the stack, group by the number of adjacent washers in parallel. For example, in the stack of washers to the right, the grouping is 2-3-1-2, because there is a group of 2 washers in parallel, then a group of 3, then a single washer, then another group of 2.

The total spring coefficient is:

 
 
 

Where

  •  = the number of washers in the ith group
  •   = the number of groups
  •   = the spring constant of one washer

So, a 2-3-1-2 stack (or, since addition is commutative, a 3-2-2-1 stack) gives a spring constant of 3/7 that of a single washer. These same 8 washers can be arranged in a 3-3-2 configuration ( ), a 4-4 configuration ( ), a 2-2-2-2 configuration ( ), and various other configurations. The number of unique ways to stack   washers is defined by the integer partition function p(n) and increases rapidly with large  , allowing fine-tuning of the spring constant. However, each configuration will have a different length, requiring the use of shims in most cases.

Standards

  • DIN EN 16983 formerly DIN 2092 — Disc springs — Calculation
  • DIN EN 16984 formerly DIN 2093 — Disc springs - Manufacturing & Quality specifications[14]
  • DIN 6796 — Conical spring washers for bolted connections[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Shigley, Joseph Edward; Mischke, Charles R.; Brown, Thomas H. (2004), Standard handbook of machine design (3rd ed.), McGraw-Hill Professional, p. 640, ISBN 978-0-07-144164-3.
  2. ^ a b Smith, Carroll (1990), Carroll Smith's Nuts, Bolts, Fasteners, and Plumbing Handbook, MotorBooks/MBI Publishing Company, p. 116, ISBN 0-87938-406-9.
  3. ^ Bhandari, V. B. (2010), Design of Machine Elements (3rd ed.), Tata McGraw-Hill, p. 441, ISBN 978-0-07-068179-8.
  4. ^ a b c , Schnorr, 2016, archived from the original on 2016-10-03, retrieved 2016-10-04
  5. ^ Actionclear Modern Rifles
  6. ^ Barrett, Richard T. (March 1990). "Fastener Design Manual" (PDF).
  7. ^ Infiniti Red Bull RB10 Renault
  8. ^ (PDF), Cirrus Aircraft, 2014, pp. 32, 34, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-03, retrieved 2016-10-04
  9. ^ Nakamura, Takashi; Suzuki, Tetsuo; Nobata, Arihide (1998), Study on earthquake response characteristics of base-isolated building using the friction dampers with coned disc springs (PDF), Proceedings of the 10th Earthquake Engineering Symposium, pp. 2901–2906
  10. ^ Almen, J. O.; Làszlò, A. (1936), The uniform-section disk spring, ASME 58, pp. 305–314
  11. ^ Curti, Graziano; Orlando, M. (1979), A new calculation of coned annular disc springs, Wire(28) 5, pp. 199–204
  12. ^ DIN 2092: Disc springs - Calculation, DIN, 2006
  13. ^ Ferrari, Giammarco (2013), "A new calculation method for Belleville disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness", International Journal of Manufacturing, Materials, and Mechanical Engineering, IJMMME 3(2), 3 (2): 63–73, doi:10.4018/ijmmme.2013040105
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-06-21.

belleville, washer, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Belleville washer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Belleville washer also known as a coned disc spring 1 conical spring washer 2 disc spring Belleville spring or cupped spring washer is a conical shell which can be loaded along its axis either statically or dynamically A Belleville washer is a type of spring shaped like a washer It is the frusto conical shape that gives the washer its characteristic spring Belleville washer The Belleville name comes from the inventor Julien Belleville who in Dunkerque France in 1867 patented a spring design which already contained the principle of the disc spring 1 3 The real inventor of Belleville washers is unknown Through the years many profiles for disc springs have been developed Today the most used are the profiles with or without contact flats while some other profiles like disc springs with trapezoidal cross section have lost importance Contents 1 Features and use 2 Stacking 3 Performance considerations 4 Disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness 5 Calculation 6 Standards 7 ReferencesFeatures and use Edit Cross sectional view of an M4 anti tank mine circa 1945 showing the steel Belleville spring in the fuze mechanism Cut away view of an M14 antipersonnel landmine showing the firing pin mounted in the centre of a plastic Belleville spring In the different fields if they are used as springs or to apply a flexible pre load to a bolted joint or bearing Belleville washers can be used as a single spring or as a stack In a spring stack disc springs can be stacked in the same or in an alternating orientation and of course it is possible to stack packets of multiple springs stacked in the same direction Disc springs have a number of advantageous properties compared to other types of springs 4 Very large loads can be supported with a small installation space Due to the nearly unlimited number of possible combinations of individual disc springs the characteristic curve and the column length can be further varied within additional limits High service life under dynamic load if the spring is properly dimensioned Provided the permissible stress is not exceeded no impermissible relaxation occurs With suitable arrangement a large damping high hysteresis effect may be achieved Because the springs are of an annular shape force transmission is absolutely concentric Thanks to these advantageous properties Belleville washers are today used in a large number of fields some examples are listed in the following In the arms industry Belleville springs are used for instance in a number of landmines e g the American M19 M15 M14 M1 and the Swedish Tret Mi 59 The target a person or vehicle exerts pressure on the Belleville spring causing it to exceed a trigger threshold and flip the adjacent firing pin downwards into a stab detonator firing both it and the surrounding booster charge and main explosive filling Belleville washers have been used as return springs in artillery pieces one example being the French Canet range of marine coastal cannon from the late 1800s 75 mm 120 mm 152 mm Some makers of bolt action target rifles use Belleville washer stacks in the bolt instead of a more traditional spring to release the firing pin as they reduce the time between trigger actuation and firing pin impact on the cartridge 5 Belleville washers without serrations which can harm the clamping surface have no significant locking capability in bolted applications 6 On aircraft typically experimental aircraft with wooden propellers Belleville washers used on the mounting bolts can be useful as an indicator of swelling or shrinkage of the wood By torquing their associated bolts to provide a specific gap between sets of washers placed with high ends facing each other a change in relative moisture content in the propeller wood will result in a change of the gaps which is often great enough to be detected visually As propeller balance depends on the weight of blades being equal a radical difference in the washer gaps may indicate a difference in moisture content and thus weight in the adjacent blades In the aircraft and automotive industries including Formula One cars 7 better source needed disc springs are used as vibration damping elements because of their extremely detailed tuning ability The Cirrus SR2x series of airplanes uses a Belleville washer setup to damp out nose gear oscillations or shimmy 8 In the building industry in Japan stacks of disc springs have been used under buildings as vibration dampers for earthquakes 9 Belleville washers are used in some high pressure air regulators such as those found on paintball markers and air tanks Stacking EditMultiple Belleville washers may be stacked to modify the spring constant or spring rate or the amount of deflection Stacking in the same direction will add the spring constant in parallel creating a stiffer joint with the same deflection Stacking in an alternating direction is the same as adding common springs in series resulting in a lower spring constant and greater deflection Mixing and matching directions allow a specific spring constant and deflection capacity to be designed Generally if n disc springs are stacked in parallel facing the same direction standing the load the deflection of the whole stack is equal to that of one disc spring divided by n then to obtain the same deflection of a single disc spring the load to apply has to be n times that of a single disc spring On the other hand if n washers are stacked in series facing in alternating directions standing the load the deflection is equal to n times that of one washer while the load to apply at the whole stack to obtain the same deflection of one disc spring has to be that of a single disc spring divided by n Performance considerations EditIn a parallel stack hysteresis load losses will occur due to friction between the springs The hysteresis losses can be advantageous in some systems because of the added damping and dissipation of vibration energy This loss due to friction can be calculated using hysteresis methods Ideally no more than 4 springs should be placed in parallel If a greater load is required then factor of safety must be increased in order to compensate for loss of load due to friction Friction loss is not as much of an issue in series stacks In a series stack the deflection is not exactly proportional to the number of springs This is because of a bottoming out effect when the springs are compressed to flat as the contact surface area increases once the spring is deflected beyond 95 This decreases the moment arm and the spring will offer a greater spring resistance Hysteresis can be used to calculate predicted deflections in a series stack The number of springs used in a series stack is not as much of an issue as in parallel stacks even if generally the stack height should not be greater than three times the outside diameter of the disc spring If it is not possible to avoid a longer stack then it should be divided into 2 or possibly 3 partial stacks with suitable washers These washers should be guided as exactly as possible As previously said Belleville washers are useful for adjustments because different thicknesses can be swapped in and out and they can be configured to achieve essentially infinite tunability of spring rate while only filling up a small part of the technician s tool box They are ideal in situations where a heavy spring force is required with minimal free length and compression before reaching solid height The downside though is weight and they are severely travel limited compared to a conventional coil spring when free length is not an issue A wave washer also acts as a spring but wave washers of comparable size do not produce as much force as Belleville washers nor can they be stacked in series Disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness EditFor disc springs with a thickness of more than 6 0 mm DIN 2093 specifies small contact surfaces at points I and III that is the point where the load is applied and the point where the load touches the ground in addition to the rounded corners These contact flats improve definition of the point of load application and particularly for spring stacks reduce friction at the guide rod The result is a considerable reduction in the lever arm length and a corresponding increase in the spring load This is in turn compensated for by a reduction in the spring thickness The reduced thickness is specified in accordance with the following conditions 4 The overall height remains unaltered The width of the contact flats that is the annulus width is to be approximately 1 150 of the outside diameter The load applied to the reduced thickness spring to obtain a deflection equal to the 75 of the free height of an unreduced spring must be the same as for an unreduced spring As the overall height is not reduced springs with reduced thickness inevitably have an increased flank angle and a greater cone height than springs of the same nominal dimension without reduced thickness 4 Therefore the characteristic curve is altered and becomes completely different Calculation EditStarting from 1936 when J O Almen and A Laszlo published a simplified method of calculation 10 always more accurate and complex methods appeared also in order to include in calculations disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness So although today there are more accurate methods of calculation 11 the most used are the simple and convenient formulas of DIN 2092 as for standard dimensions they produce values which correspond well to the measured results Considering a Belleville washer with outside diameter D e displaystyle D e inside diameter D i displaystyle D i height l displaystyle l and thickness t displaystyle t where h 0 displaystyle h 0 is the free height that is the difference between the height and the thickness the following coefficients are obtained d D e D i displaystyle delta frac D e D i C 1 t t 2 1 4 l t t t 3 4 5 8 l t t t 3 8 displaystyle C 1 frac left frac t t right 2 left frac 1 4 cdot frac l t frac t t frac 3 4 right cdot left frac 5 8 cdot frac l t frac t t frac 3 8 right C 2 C 1 t t 3 5 32 l t 1 2 1 displaystyle C 2 frac C 1 left frac t t right 3 cdot left frac 5 32 cdot left frac l t 1 right 2 1 right K 4 C 1 2 C 1 2 2 C 2 displaystyle K 4 sqrt frac C 1 2 sqrt left frac C 1 2 right 2 C 2 The equation to calculate the load to apply to a single disc spring in order to obtain a deflection s displaystyle s is 12 F 4 E 1 m 2 t 4 K 1 D e 2 K 4 2 s t K 4 2 h 0 t s t h 0 t s 2 t 1 displaystyle F frac 4E 1 mu 2 cdot frac t 4 K 1 D e 2 cdot K 4 2 cdot frac s t cdot left K 4 2 cdot left frac h 0 t frac s t right cdot left frac h 0 t frac s 2t right 1 right Note that for disc springs with constant thickness t displaystyle t is equal to t displaystyle t and consequently K 4 displaystyle K 4 is 1 For what concerns disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness it has to be said that a paper published in July 2013 demonstrated that the K 4 displaystyle K 4 equation as defined inside the standard norms is not correct as it would result in every reduced thickness being considered right and this is of course impossible As written in that paper K 4 displaystyle K 4 should be replaced with a new coefficient R d displaystyle R d which depends not only from the t t displaystyle frac t t ratio but also from the flank angles of the spring 13 The spring constant or spring rate is defined as k d F d s displaystyle k frac dF ds Belleville washer stack illustration If friction and bottoming out effects are ignored the spring rate of a stack of identical Belleville washers can be quickly approximated Counting from one end of the stack group by the number of adjacent washers in parallel For example in the stack of washers to the right the grouping is 2 3 1 2 because there is a group of 2 washers in parallel then a group of 3 then a single washer then another group of 2 The total spring coefficient is K k i 1 g 1 n i displaystyle K frac k sum i 1 g frac 1 n i K k 1 2 1 3 1 1 1 2 displaystyle K frac k frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 1 frac 1 2 K 3 7 k displaystyle K frac 3 7 cdot k Where n i displaystyle n i the number of washers in the ith group g displaystyle g the number of groups k displaystyle k the spring constant of one washerSo a 2 3 1 2 stack or since addition is commutative a 3 2 2 1 stack gives a spring constant of 3 7 that of a single washer These same 8 washers can be arranged in a 3 3 2 configuration K 6 7 k displaystyle K frac 6 7 cdot k a 4 4 configuration K 2 k displaystyle K 2 cdot k a 2 2 2 2 configuration K 1 2 k displaystyle K frac 1 2 cdot k and various other configurations The number of unique ways to stack n displaystyle n washers is defined by the integer partition function p n and increases rapidly with large n displaystyle n allowing fine tuning of the spring constant However each configuration will have a different length requiring the use of shims in most cases Standards EditDIN EN 16983 formerly DIN 2092 Disc springs Calculation DIN EN 16984 formerly DIN 2093 Disc springs Manufacturing amp Quality specifications 14 DIN 6796 Conical spring washers for bolted connections 2 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Belleville washers a b Shigley Joseph Edward Mischke Charles R Brown Thomas H 2004 Standard handbook of machine design 3rd ed McGraw Hill Professional p 640 ISBN 978 0 07 144164 3 a b Smith Carroll 1990 Carroll Smith s Nuts Bolts Fasteners and Plumbing Handbook MotorBooks MBI Publishing Company p 116 ISBN 0 87938 406 9 Bhandari V B 2010 Design of Machine Elements 3rd ed Tata McGraw Hill p 441 ISBN 978 0 07 068179 8 a b c Schnorr Handbook Schnorr 2016 archived from the original on 2016 10 03 retrieved 2016 10 04 Actionclear Modern Rifles Barrett Richard T March 1990 Fastener Design Manual PDF Infiniti Red Bull RB10 Renault Cirrus airplane maintenance manual PDF Cirrus Aircraft 2014 pp 32 34 archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 03 retrieved 2016 10 04 Nakamura Takashi Suzuki Tetsuo Nobata Arihide 1998 Study on earthquake response characteristics of base isolated building using the friction dampers with coned disc springs PDF Proceedings of the 10th Earthquake Engineering Symposium pp 2901 2906 Almen J O Laszlo A 1936 The uniform section disk spring ASME 58 pp 305 314 Curti Graziano Orlando M 1979 A new calculation of coned annular disc springs Wire 28 5 pp 199 204 DIN 2092 Disc springs Calculation DIN 2006 Ferrari Giammarco 2013 A new calculation method for Belleville disc springs with contact flats and reduced thickness International Journal of Manufacturing Materials and Mechanical Engineering IJMMME 3 2 3 2 63 73 doi 10 4018 ijmmme 2013040105 Products Archived from the original on 2020 06 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belleville washer amp oldid 1102424279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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