Torque required to spin a hollow cylinder

AI Thread Summary
To determine the torque required to spin a hollow cylinder at 25 RPM, the inertia of the cylinder is calculated using the formula I = M * r², resulting in I = 0.1201 kg/m². The torque needed for acceleration is derived from T = I x angular acceleration, yielding approximately 0.3144 Nm. However, this calculation only accounts for the torque required to accelerate the cylinder and does not consider external resistances like friction from bearings and supports. Once the cylinder reaches a steady speed, the torque needed to maintain that speed is primarily to counteract these external forces. For accurate motor sizing, consulting with an electric motor manufacturer is recommended.
Slikatel
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
TL;DR Summary
Hello all and thanks for viewing this, I am in need of some assistance to solve a problem to size an AC motor rotating this load (power transmission will be trough belt & pulley).
Hello all and thanks for viewing this, I am in need of some assistance to solve a problem to size an AC motor rotating this load (power transmission will be trough belt & pulley).

I have a hollow cylinder (pipe) that needs to spin 25 RPM:

- OD = 50 mm
- ID = 48 mm
- M = 200 kg
- Total length = 40m

The formula for inertia (Z-axis) i found when searching for a hollow cylinder = I = M * r^2 this gives me a solution of I = 0.1201 kg/m²

If i put this in the torque formula of T = I x angular acceleration = 0.1201 kg/m² x 2.618 rad/s2 (25RPM - 1 sec - ) = 0,3144218 Nm?

I'm stuck here :) would like to have some advice in where to search. Thanks so much for the advice.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
The torque you calculate from your I equation is the torque required to accelerate (or decelerate ) the rotational speed of the pipe from one rpm speed to another rpm speed; but, must also include any external rotational resistances, such as the pipe's supporting roller's contact and bearing frictions (which for the support of 40 m long pipe could be significant).

Once your cylinder is rotating at a fixed rpm speed (i.e. 25 rpm) then the only torque required to keep it rotating at that speed is the torque to resist forces applied to the cylinder from the external effects, such as the pipe's supporting roller's contact and bearing frictions and any external forces from whatever is being done to the pipe while it is rotating.

Then with that information your best route is to contact an electric motor manufacturer/supplier for motor sizing.
 
Last edited:
Hi JBA and thanks for the reply, greatly appreciated.

So if i read your message correctly you are saying that for starting of the rotation (from non-turning formula) i need another formula?
 
Thread 'Physics of Stretch: What pressure does a band apply on a cylinder?'
Scenario 1 (figure 1) A continuous loop of elastic material is stretched around two metal bars. The top bar is attached to a load cell that reads force. The lower bar can be moved downwards to stretch the elastic material. The lower bar is moved downwards until the two bars are 1190mm apart, stretching the elastic material. The bars are 5mm thick, so the total internal loop length is 1200mm (1190mm + 5mm + 5mm). At this level of stretch, the load cell reads 45N tensile force. Key numbers...
I'm trying to decide what size and type of galvanized steel I need for 2 cantilever extensions. The cantilever is 5 ft. The space between the two cantilever arms is a 17 ft Gap the center 7 ft of the 17 ft Gap we'll need to Bear approximately 17,000 lb spread evenly from the front of the cantilever to the back of the cantilever over 5 ft. I will put support beams across these cantilever arms to support the load evenly
Back
Top