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Sunday, 9 November 2008

S.F.D. for CANTILEVER BEAMS

  Edunes Online Education

B.Tech Mechanical Engg.

Engineering Mechanics : SFD and BMD
Cantilever Beam

How to draw the SFD and BMD of a Cantilever Beam


Edunes Online Education

SHEAR FORCE & BENDING MOMENT – CANTILEVER BEAM

A Cantilever Beam is fixed at one end and free at the other. At the fixed end, three reactions exist:
  • Vertical Reaction (RA)
  • Horizontal Reaction (HA)
  • Reaction Moment (MR)
🧠 MEMORY IMAGE: Think of your arm stretched out holding a weight. Your shoulder = Fixed End. Your palm = Free End. The shoulder must resist force AND rotation.

STEP 1: HOW TO THINK (NOT JUST SOLVE)

Before writing equations, ask:
  1. Where is the fixed end?
  2. What forces exist on the left of my section?
  3. Is load point, UDL, or UVL?
  4. What is positive?
    (Upward + , Downward −)
CORE IDEA: Shear Force at section = Algebraic sum of vertical forces on LEFT side.

Bending Moment at section = Sum of (Force × distance) on LEFT side + applied moments.
🧠 Golden Rule:
“CUT – ISOLATE – SUM – WRITE”

1. Cut the beam
2. Look LEFT
3. Sum forces
4. Write equation
Cantilever

Draw shear force & bending moment diagrams and equations

Cantilever reactions

Cantilever reactions and Momemts

SECTION AB (0 ≤ X ≤ 2)

Cantilever section AB
For 0 ≤ X ≤ 2

Shear Force:
SF = RA = 130 kN

Bending Moment:

BM = − MR + RAX
BM = −720 + 130X
X Shear Force (kN) Bending Moment (kN·m)
0 130 −720
2 130 −460
🧠 Observation:
If Shear is CONSTANT → SFD is straight line.
Moment is LINEAR → BMD is sloping line.

SECTION BD (2 ≤ X ≤ 6)

Cantilever section BD
Here UDL starts. UDL effect = Load × length considered.
Shear Force:
SF = 130 − 20(X − 2)

Bending Moment:

BM = −720 + 130X − {20(X − 2)²}/2
X Shear Force (kN) Bending Moment (kN·m)
2 130 −460
6 50 −100
🧠 Observation: UDL makes Shear vary LINEARLY.
UDL makes Moment PARABOLIC.

SECTION DE (6 ≤ X ≤ 8)

Cantilever section DE
Shear Force:
SF = 130 − 80 = 50 kN

Bending Moment:

BM = −720 + 130X − 80(X − 4)
X Shear Force (kN) Bending Moment (kN·m)
6 50 −100
8 50 0
🧠 IMPORTANT:
Moment at FREE END of a cantilever = ZERO (if no applied moment).

FINAL VISUAL LOGIC

SFD and BMD
Think Graphically:

• Point Load → Jump in SFD
• UDL → Sloping SFD
• Shear constant → Straight BMD
• Shear linear → Parabolic BMD
• Maximum BM occurs where SF = 0
🧠 Neurological Anchor:
Shear = “Force Feeling”
Moment = “Rotation Feeling”

If force is constant → moment changes smoothly.
If force changes → curvature appears.

Your brain remembers shapes better than numbers.

EXAM THINKING STRATEGY

1. Draw FBD first.
2. Write reactions.
3. Divide into segments.
4. Write SF equation.
5. Integrate logic to get BM.
6. Verify boundary conditions.
🧠 Final Compression Formula:

Cantilever Fixed End → Maximum Moment
Free End → Zero Moment
UDL → Parabola
Point Load → Straight Line

Visualize before calculating.

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IC ENGINES AND COMBUSTION CHAMBER

Combustion Chamber in IC Engines | Components, Design & Failure Criteria | Mechanical Engineering

  Edunes Online Education

What are IC engines
What is a Combustion Chambers
Design and Failures Analysis
Components | Designs | Failures of IC engines

Introductions of IC engines and its Components


Edunes Online Education

Machine Design | Mechanical Engineering | B.Tech |
πŸ“Œ Introduction of IC engingines and Combustion Chambers

🧠 WHAT ARE IC ENGINES — AND HOW SHOULD YOU THINK ABOUT THEM?
Think in ENERGY FLOW:
πŸ‘‰ Chemical Energy (Fuel) → Thermal Energy (Combustion) → Mechanical Energy (Motion)

An Internal Combustion (IC) Engine is simply a machine that **forces energy conversion to happen inside a confined space**.
Core Idea:
In IC engines, fuel burns inside the engine cylinder, unlike steam engines where combustion happens outside.
πŸ”‘ Memory Hook:
IC = Inside Combustion → Energy is born where motion is needed.
Cylinder head
πŸ”₯ WHAT IS A COMBUSTION CHAMBER REALLY?
Do not memorize definitions. Ask yourself:
  1. Where does burning happen?
  2. Where does pressure build up?
  3. What pushes the piston?
The answer to all three is: COMBUSTION CHAMBER.
The combustion chamber is a specially designed enclosed space where:
  1. Fuel and air mix
  2. Ignition occurs
  3. High pressure is generated
  4. Piston is forced to move
🧠 Memory Image:
Imagine a sealed pressure cooker with a movable lid — that lid is the piston.
πŸ“ WHERE IS THE COMBUSTION CHAMBER LOCATED?
In Reciprocating Engines:
Located at the top of the cylinder, just above the piston.
In Rotary Engines:
Located at the central region where rotating chambers trap fuel-air mixture.
Thinking trick:
Wherever pressure must act directly → that is where combustion must happen.
🧩 WHY DOES SHAPE OF COMBUSTION CHAMBER MATTER?
Never think of shape as “design detail”. Think of shape as a controller of flame and pressure.
Design Aspect What It Controls Effect on Engine
Shape Flame travel path Smooth / violent combustion
Size Compression ratio Power & efficiency
Surface area Heat loss Fuel economy
πŸ”‘ Memory Line:
Bad shape → bad flame → wasted fuel
⚙️ SIZE OF COMBUSTION CHAMBER & COMPRESSION RATIO
Compression Ratio is directly linked to combustion chamber size.

Smaller chamber → higher compression → more temperature → better efficiency
Think Physically:
  1. Same fuel
  2. Smaller space
  3. Higher pressure
  4. Stronger push on piston
🧠 Formula-Free Memory:
Squeeze harder → burn hotter → move stronger
πŸ”Œ TYPES OF COMBUSTION CHAMBERS — THINK BY IGNITION METHOD
Engine Type Ignition Method Fuel
Spark Ignition (SI) Spark Plug Petrol
Compression Ignition (CI) Self-ignition due to heat Diesel
Ask ONE question:
“Who starts the fire?”
Spark → SI Engine Heat → CI Engine
πŸ”₯ Memory Trick:
Petrol needs help (spark)
Diesel is brave (self-ignites)
🎯 FINAL EXAM-ORIENTED THINKING FRAME
When answering any IC engine question:
  1. Start with energy conversion
  2. Locate combustion chamber
  3. Explain pressure generation
  4. Link design to efficiency
🧠 ONE-LINE MASTER KEY:
The combustion chamber decides how well fuel becomes force.
Normal Combustion
🧠 HOW SHOULD YOU THINK ABOUT COMPONENTS OF A COMBUSTION CHAMBER?
Do NOT memorize a list.
Think in a CAUSE → EFFECT → RESULT chain:
  1. Something must hold pressure
  2. Something must ignite fuel
  3. Something must move
  4. Something must control entry & exit
Each component exists to answer one of these needs.
πŸ”‘ Brain Anchor:
No component is decorative — every part solves a problem.
🧩 CYLINDER HEAD — THE CONTROL ROOM
The cylinder head is the top cover of the engine cylinder that:
  1. Seals the combustion chamber
  2. Holds valves
  3. Holds spark plug / injector
Think like this:
If pressure leaks → engine fails.
The cylinder head exists to trap explosion safely.
🧠 Visual Memory:
Cylinder head = Lid of a pressure cooker
⬆️⬇️ PISTON — THE FORCE TRANSLATOR
The piston is a moving cylindrical part that:
  1. Compresses air–fuel mixture
  2. Receives force from combustion
  3. Transfers force to crankshaft
Explosion alone is useless. Motion is needed.
The piston converts pressure into motion.
πŸ”‘ Memory Line:
No piston → no motion → no engine
πŸšͺ VALVES — THE GATEKEEPERS
Valves control what enters and exits the combustion chamber.
  1. Intake Valve: Allows air/fuel to enter
  2. Exhaust Valve: Allows burnt gases to exit
Ask yourself:
What happens if gases enter or leave at the wrong time?
→ Engine efficiency collapses
🧠 Memory Trick:
Valves decide when the engine breathes
Normal Combustion
⚡ SPARK PLUG — THE IGNITION SWITCH
The spark plug produces an electric spark that:
  1. Ignites air–fuel mixture
  2. Starts combustion
  3. Controls timing of explosion
Petrol does not self-ignite easily.
It needs a trigger.
πŸ”₯ Memory Image:
Spark plug = matchstick of the engine
πŸ’‰ FUEL INJECTOR — THE DOSAGE EXPERT
The fuel injector delivers fuel:
  1. At high pressure
  2. At precise timing
  3. In correct quantity
Too much fuel → smoke & waste Too little fuel → power loss
The injector ensures perfect balance.
🧠 Memory Line:
Injector decides how healthy the explosion is
🧱 COMBUSTION CHAMBER WALLS — THE SURVIVORS
Chamber walls:
  1. Withstand very high pressure
  2. Survive extreme temperature
  3. Prevent gas leakage
Combustion is violent.
Walls exist so destruction turns into useful work.
🧠 Memory Image:
Walls = Armor of the engine
πŸ”„ INTAKE & EXHAUST PORTS — THE AIR PATHWAYS
Ports are passages that:
  1. Guide fresh charge into chamber
  2. Guide exhaust gases out
Smooth flow → better filling → better combustion.
Ports control breathing efficiency.
🧠 One-liner:
Ports decide how freely the engine breathes
🎯 FINAL THINKING MAP (EXAM GOLD)
Link every component to a role:
  1. Seal → Cylinder head & walls
  2. Move → Piston
  3. Control flow → Valves & ports
  4. Ignite → Spark plug
  5. Supply fuel → Injector
🧠 MASTER KEY:
A combustion chamber is a team — remove one player, the engine fails.
🧠 HOW TO THINK ABOUT DESIGNING A COMBUSTION CHAMBER?
Never treat design criteria as a checklist.
Think like an engineer asking ONE core question:

“How do I convert maximum fuel energy into useful work with minimum loss and damage?”

Every design criterion exists to reduce a specific loss.
πŸ”‘ Brain Rule:
Good design = less waste, more work
πŸŒͺ️ AIR–FUEL MIXTURE — THE FOUNDATION
The combustion chamber must ensure:
  1. Uniform mixing of air and fuel
  2. No rich or lean pockets
Ask yourself:
If fuel and air are not mixed properly, can combustion be complete?
→ NO
🧠 Memory Image:
Uneven mixture = half-cooked food
πŸ”₯ FLAME PROPAGATION — SPEED MATTERS
The chamber must allow:
  1. Fast flame travel
  2. Uniform burning across the chamber
Slow flame = pressure builds late = power loss.
Good design makes the flame reach everywhere before the piston moves too far.
πŸ”‘ One-liner:
Fast flame → strong push
πŸ“ COMPRESSION RATIO — THE POWER DECIDER
The combustion chamber volume decides:
  1. Compression ratio
  2. Peak temperature
  3. Peak pressure
Smaller clearance volume → higher compression.
Higher compression → better thermal efficiency.
🧠 Memory Line:
Squeeze more → get more
✅ COMBUSTION EFFICIENCY — BURN IT ALL
A well-designed chamber ensures:
  1. Complete burning of fuel
  2. Minimum unburnt hydrocarbons
Unburnt fuel = wasted money + pollution.
Design aims to turn every drop into pressure.
πŸ”₯ Memory Trick:
Unburnt fuel is stolen power
🌊 TURBULENCE — CONTROLLED CHAOS
Turbulence helps:
  1. Better mixing
  2. Faster flame propagation
Calm flow mixes poorly.
Too much turbulence wastes energy.
Design seeks the perfect disturbance.
🧠 Visual Memory:
Stirring helps cooking — same with combustion
🌑️ WALL HEAT TRANSFER — PROTECT THE ENERGY
Chamber walls should:
  1. Lose minimum heat
  2. Withstand extreme temperatures
Heat lost to walls = power lost forever.
Design minimizes surface area and exposure time.
πŸ”‘ Memory Line:
Heat to walls is heat wasted
πŸ”¨ KNOCK RESISTANCE — CONTROL THE EXPLOSION
Combustion chamber must:
  1. Prevent premature ignition
  2. Avoid pressure shock waves
Knock is uncontrolled combustion.
Good design ensures smooth pressure rise.
🧠 Memory Image:
Knock = hammering inside the engine
🌍 EMISSIONS — DESIGN WITH RESPONSIBILITY
Chamber design affects:
  1. NOx formation
  2. CO emission
  3. Particulate matter
High temperature + poor mixing = high emissions.
Design balances power with cleanliness.
🌱 Memory Line:
Clean burn is smart burn
🎯 FINAL THINKING FRAME (EXAM PERFECT)
While answering:
  1. Start with mixture quality
  2. Move to flame & pressure
  3. Discuss losses
  4. End with emissions & knock
🧠 MASTER SENTENCE:
A combustion chamber is designed to burn fast, burn fully, burn safely.
🧠 HOW TO THINK ABOUT FAILURE OF A COMBUSTION CHAMBER?
Do not treat failures as accidents.
Think in a CAUSE → STRESS → DAMAGE chain.

A combustion chamber fails when it is forced to handle:
  1. Too much heat
  2. Too much pressure
  3. Wrong timing of combustion
  4. Long-term material attack
🧠 Brain Rule:
Engines don’t fail suddenly — they are pushed beyond limits.
🌑️ OVERHEATING — WHEN HEAT WINS
Overheating occurs due to:
  1. Lean air–fuel mixture
  2. Excessive compression
  3. Poor cooling
Heat causes metals to:
→ expand
→ weaken
→ crack or warp
πŸ”₯ Memory Image:
Too much heat bends metal like wax
πŸ’₯ DETONATION — THE VIOLENT FAILURE
Detonation is:
Uncontrolled, explosive combustion
instead of smooth flame travel.
Causes:
  1. High compression
  2. Hot spots in chamber
  3. Low-octane fuel
Effect:
Shock waves hit chamber walls like a hammer.
🧠 Memory Line:
Detonation = explosion, not combustion
πŸ”₯ PRE-IGNITION — FIRE TOO EARLY
Pre-ignition occurs when:
Fuel ignites before the spark.
Think timing:
Combustion should occur when piston is ready.
If fire starts early → piston fights pressure.
⏰ Memory Trick:
Early fire breaks engines
πŸ§ͺ CORROSION — THE SILENT KILLER
Corrosion occurs due to:
  1. Combustion by-products
  2. Fuel impurities
  3. Moisture & acids
Corrosion:
→ thins walls
→ weakens structure
→ causes cracks over time
🧠 Memory Image:
Rust eats strength silently
πŸ”§ MECHANICAL DAMAGE — HUMAN & EXTERNAL ERRORS
Mechanical damage can be due to:
  1. Improper assembly
  2. Poor maintenance
  3. Foreign debris
Even perfect design fails if:
handling is careless.
πŸ› ️ Memory Line:
Bad maintenance kills good machines
πŸ“Š FAILURE SUMMARY — THINK COMPARATIVELY
Failure Mode Main Cause Damage Type
Overheating Excess heat Warping / cracking
Detonation Shock waves Structural damage
Pre-ignition Wrong timing Piston & wall damage
Corrosion Chemical attack Wall thinning
Mechanical damage External factors Leaks / cracks
🎯 FINAL THINKING FRAME (EXAM READY)
Always connect failure to:
  1. Temperature
  2. Pressure
  3. Timing
  4. Material strength
  5. Maintenance
🧠 MASTER LINE:
A combustion chamber fails when heat, pressure, or timing goes out of control.

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