Title: Traction and Soil
1Traction and Soil
2Questions We Would Like to Answer
- How much pull (draft) can we produce with this
vehicle? - Skid steer, tractor, tank, tracked trencher
- What determines that draft?
- Which parameters matter most?
- Which ones do we have any control over?
- If designing a vehicle what shall we do?
3Soil !
- Consider what draft you might expect to generate
on the following surfaces - two inches of dry sand over firm ground
- saturated clay
- freshly worked silt loam
- dry silt loam no till
- hard packed moist clay
- Whats the difference?
- The strength of the soil..
4Normal Force
Horizontal Force
Displacement Of Plate
Lugs engage soil
5Maximum Force for any given normal loading
Different Normal Loads
Horizontal Force Sustained
A given normal load is applied. The plate is
displaced to the right. If we had a sensor
connected we would measure the horizontal force
as the plate is displaced.
Horizontal Displacement of our grouser plate
6Soil Maximum Shear Strength
7Soil Maximum Shear Strength
- Lets look at this as you did with other
materials in Mechanics of Materials - Remember Mohrs Circle of Stress Analysis
- Applied Normal stress
- Applied Shear stress
- Maximum Principle Stress?
- Now back to soil
8Classic Mohr Coulomb Model
- Force developed at maximum soil strength with our
shear plate was - Fmax Ac Wtanf Note A is area, W is weight,
c is soil cohesion and f is internal friction
angle of the soil - Divide by the Area of the plate, A
- tmax c W/A tanf c p tan f
9Soil Maximum Shear Strength
tmax c ? tan f
t1 t2 t3
Maximum Shear Stress
c
?1 ?2 ?3
Normal Stress, ?
10Max soil shear strength
- Note that this strength function is linear (2
parameters.) - Intercept is c, the soil cohesion
- Slope is ?t/??
- We call this the tangent of the soils internal
friction angle and represent internal friction
angle with f - Memorize the meaning of these c and f
11What does it mean??
- Soil shear strength is a function of the
compressive (normal) load on it - Greater soil strength allows greater tangential
loads before soil failure - How do we get higher normal loads?
- Heavier vehicle
- Ballast
- So we ballast to increase soil strength to allow
greater tractive effort
12Lets look at a Track Model
- Track lugs enter the soil (similarity to test
plate) - However, soil displacement varies with lug
13Less than Max Soil Strength Case
- For small lug displacements we wont reach the
max soil strength - Then we need a function to indicate the soil
strength as a function of displacement - We need an equation for the curves at right
14Less than Max Soil Strength Case
- Curves look exponential
- t (c p tanf)(1 e-j/K)
- p is normal pressure
- j is soil displacement
- K is a soil related constant
- Now we have a curve, but where are we on it?
- How do we know what j, the displacement is ?
K
15Track/Soil Displacement
Vs
- Vehicle has a theoretical, no slip, velocity, Vt
- Vehicle has an actual velocity, Va
- Vt Va Vs , the slip velocity
- The bottom of the track moves at Vs rearward
relative to the soil. See above
16Relate slip velocity to track displacement
x
- Denote x the position of a point on the contact
patch (not the track), measured from its leading
edge - x Vtt (theoretical track velocity times time)
- Recall, Vt Va Vs , the slip velocity
- Displacement, j, Vst (velocity times time)
- Then j Vst Vs(x/Vt) sx
17The contact patch
b
x
l
0
18What does THAT mean?
- Shear displacement, j, increases linearly from
the entry point to the exit point of the track
and is dependent upon the slip - How do we define slip?
- Slip s (Vt Va) / Vt Vs/ Vt
- Slip can range from near zero (on dry concrete)
to 1, or 100, (stuck.)
19Now Model Track Thrust, F
- We have a model for soil shear strength, and for
shear force, and one for soil shear displacement
so - Combine them
- t (c ptanf)(1 e-j/K ) tmax(1-e-sx/K)
20Track Thrust Model
- Our model predicts the thrust that the track will
generate - It includes varying soils strength as the soil is
progressively sheared under the track - Note that it assumes a constant pressure, p, upon
the ground from the track - Hmmmmmmm.
21Ground Pressure Under a Track
- Pressure under an Abrams tank might be relatively
constant with LOTS of bogies - Pressure under a track for a vehicle pulling an
implement (tractor.) might see - Variation under bogie or roller wheels
- Increase front to rear as weight transfer from
draft force puts more downpressure on the rear
drive wheel
22Bogies or Rollers
Rear Drive Wheel
Front Tension Wheel
Pressure under a track
Elapsed Time (represents position under track)
23Incorporating Pressure Variation
- Note that our earlier model is integrated over
the contact patch length - If we can come up with a function for the
pressure over that same length we can add that
function to the integral - Why?
- Because soil strength is a function of pressure
24Lets try an example
- Givens
- Track contact length 7 or 84 inches
- Track width 20.8 inches
- Weight on each track is 9082 lbs
- Soil cohesion 3.8 psi
- Soil internal friction angle 24 degrees
- Soil shear deformation modulus 2.2 inches
- Slip 6 or 0.06
- Track pressure is UNIFORM (not but well assume
it is for this example)
25Thrust force Equation
I used a website for integrals to find the
integral for the hard part
26Max Shear Strength tmax
- Since we are treating the ground pressure as a
constant we have a constant value of the maximum
soil shear strength
27Now we calculate the Track Force, F
- Slip0.06, l 84 inches, K2.2 inches
- At x l 84 and b20.8, t 6.11
- At x 0
- The Track Force is 11,147 - 4,6606,487 lb
28Some Discussion
- Note that the traction force, F, is less than we
might expect for the contact patch failing at
tmax, and yet we are using tmax - F c (bl) W tanf 10,683 lb , but we got
4,660 lb - Why is this so?
- What are the units on the bracketed term below?
29Some Answers
- The effective track length is less than 84
inches because the soil does not develop its full
strength until the shear displacement reaches a
value well above 2.2 inches - Only the soil under the back portion of the track
is providing near full strength - This would be even more pronounced with a
situation where the loading was heavier at the
rear of the track
30Question
- How would you approach the problem if you had a
non uniform soil pressure from front to rear
under the track? - Consider how you would describe pressure
- Consider K .
- The integral could get messy
31More Discussion
- What have we left out?
- Weve modeled the thrust that can be generated as
the soil is displaced and failed - Consider operating in very soft soil or mud
- As we dig a hole we may encounter some soil
resistance - We may push a wave of soil ahead of us
- It takes energy to compress the soil or
continually climb out of our trench
32Motion Resistance in a Track-Soil System
- We have outlined a model to calculate the thrust
force from the soil on a track given - Soil strength model (c, f, K)
- Track width and contact length
- Track slip
- The track thrust is forward on the track
- What about resistance to track motion?
- Think of towing a tracked vehicle in neutral
33Track Rut and Bow Wave
- Soil level prior to passage
- Vehicle track
- Bottom of rut and bow wave
- Logarithmic soil fracture characteristic
34What causes motion resistance?
- Motion resistance depends upon how deep we sink
in as we move along - This sinkage is dependent upon the soil
- We need a model to predict the sinkage
- Would help if it was a function of stuff that we
know about the vehicle already - Ground pressure
- Track dimensions
35Soil Bearing Strength Model
- Bekker gives a soil sinkage model
- P is pressure (psi or Pa)
- b is track or test plate width (in. or m)
- Z is sinkage (in. or m)
- Kc , kf , and n are constants determined from
load-sinkage tests with two or more different
size plates
36Work Done in Sinkage of the Track
- Assume sinkage occurs linearly from track entry
to exit and is governed by pressure - Express sinkage, z, as a function
37Integrate over rut depth
- Work integral
- But P is related to z
- Sub P into the integral
- Or.
- Now substitute z from above into this
- This should be the same as work done pulling the
loaded track a distance l
38Motion Resistance Force
- Let Rmr be the motion resistance force
- Rut work Rmr x l
- Divide the soil model work (previous slide) by
track length, l, to get the force, Rmr - Or. Reorganized slightly
39What about that Bow Wave
- This can be modeled with the Universal
Earthmoving Equation - Complex topic for this class but it would look
like this for our case
40Bow Wave Term Definitions
- Rb is motion resistance
- Kpc is a coefficient related to cohesion
- Kp? is a coefficient related to inertial forces
- ? is the soil specific weight
- b, c, zo are track width, soil cohesion, and
track sinkage respectively
41One more thing.
- Why is Bobcat interested in the track testing
station that last years design team built? - Parasitic forces involved in flexing a relatively
stiff track around the front and rear wheels - Our soil model does not include these and they
will be specific to each track design
42More Discussion
- We will leave tracks at this point. It is
possible to model their likely performance with
classic soil strength theory as we have
introduced. To be realistic, non-uniform ground
pressure and motion resistance would have to be
treated before we could begin to predict net
tractive performance and available draft.