Nihon Kikai Gakkai ronbunshu (Oct 2020)

Simulation of winding web on surface winder (Stress distribution, tension and slippage of wound roll)

  • Shigeo YANABE,
  • Shigeru NAGASAWA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1299/transjsme.20-00219
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 86, no. 891
pp. 20-00219 – 20-00219

Abstract

Read online

Surface winding processes are simulated up to 49-70 laps by means of a FEM commercial software. The simulation model is composed of a flexible web with linear-isotropic nature, rigid core and rigid drum (or rigid two drums and a rider roll). Stress distributions of wound rolls, tension (tangential stress) change during winding and layer slippage are investigated. The main results are as follows. In case of single-drum surface winding, the roll stresses become larger as a friction coefficient between web layers, nip load, drum diameter or a line tension increases, or Young’s modulus decreases. Poisson’s ratio has little effect. The roll stresses depend on not only WIT (increased tension of the outermost layer due to the nip load), but a decreasing rate of tension at a web point during winding, and they have a cross relation with a value obtained by integrating a web tension varying curve from the start point where the web enters the roll to the end of winding. In case of two-drum surface winding with differential drum speeds, the web tension varies complicatedly at three nip zones and is larger between the rider roll and the second drum. The tension of the outermost layer decreases with increase in the roll diameter. The slippage occurs as the outer web layer pulls the inner in the roll rotational direction and is larger at the outer web layers. When speeds of the two drums are equal, the first drum drives the roll and the tension is larger between the second and the first drum. The slippage is the same as the differential drum speed case in the range of 2/3 of the roll thickness, but in the rest range, the slippage occurs in the opposite direction.

Keywords