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1.
A movable lug wheel using a rollers-sliding groove mechanism was designed, constructed and tested. Two types of lug moving patterns of the movable lug wheel were proposed and evaluated. Tests were conducted in a soil bin test apparatus to determine the traction performance of the wheel as affected by lug moving pattern, lug spacing, horizontal load and vertical load. Similar tests were also conducted using a fixed lug wheel. Generally, under the same level of vertical load, the fixed lug wheel sank more than the movable lug wheels did. However in general, under various horizontal loads, there was no significant difference of slip between the movable lug wheel and the fixed lug wheel. Among the test lug wheels, the movable lug wheel with lug moving pattern-2 required the smallest driving torque and developed the highest traction efficiency.  相似文献   

2.
This study was aimed at investigating traction performance of a cage wheel for use in swampy peat soils in Indonesia. The tests were conducted in a soil bin filled with peat soil taken from the swampy areas. A set up was developed to measure tractive performance of a single cage wheel. Deep sinkage and high wheel slip were identified as the major problems of using the existing cage wheel design in swampy peat soils. The results revealed that increasing the lug angle from 15 to 35° and the length of lug improved the tractive performance of the cage wheel significantly, while increasing the number of lugs from 14 to 18 and width of lug did not improve the tractive performance significantly. A cage wheel with lug size 325×80 mm, 35° lug angle, 14 lugs (26° lug spacing), with 2 circumferential flat rings installed on the inner side of the lugs, out performed the other settings for use with power tillers in swampy peat soils.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this study is to analyze the performance of a lugged wheel for a lunar micro rover on sloped terrain by a 2D discrete element method (DEM), which was initially developed for horizontal terrain. To confirm the applicability of DEM for sloped terrain locomotion, the relationships of slope angle with slip, wheel sinkage and wheel torque obtained by DEM, were compared with experimental results measured using a slope test bed consisting of a soil bin filled with lunar regolith simulant. Among the lug parameters investigated, a lugged wheel with rim diameter of 250 mm, width of 100 mm, lug height of 10 mm, lug thickness of 5 mm, and total lug number of 18 was found, on average, to perform excellently in terms of metrics, such as slope angle for 20% slip, power number for self-propelled point, power number for 15-degree slope and power number for 20% slip. The estimation of wheel performance over sloped lunar terrain showed an increase in wheel slip, and the possibility exists that the selected lugged wheel will not be able to move up a slope steeper than 20°.  相似文献   

4.
A movable lug wheel was tested in a soil bin test apparatus to determine its traction performance and to measure the soil reaction forces on its lugs. Similar tests were also conducted using a fixed lug wheel. The effects of the lug motion pattern, lug spacing and horizontal load on pull and lift forces were studied. From the experiments it is confirmed that the movable action of the lug plate could generate superior pull and lift forces in comparison with the fixed lug wheel. Among the test wheels, lug motion pattern-2 generated the highest pull and lift forces. Within the range of the test conditions, there was no significant difference in pull and lift forces of the lug plate between the test lug wheels with 12 lugs and 15 lugs at the same level of horizontal and vertical loads. The increase of horizontal load up to 200 N generally increased the pull force and generated smaller rolling resistance before the lug left the soil, but did not increase the lift force significantly. The patterns of pull force, lift force and drawbar pull generated under a constant slip were slightly different from those under a constant horizontal load. Finally, the results were also elucidated by their actual lug trajectories in soil.  相似文献   

5.
This study was conducted to investigate the effect of circumferential angle, lug spacing and wheel slip on forces produced by a cage wheel. Experiments were conducted in a laboratory soil bin having Bangkok Clay soil with 51% (d.b.) soil moisture content. Six ring-type loadcells were used to measure the soil horizontal, vertical and transverse reactions on the cage wheel lugs. The circumferential angle was varied from 0, 15, 30 to 45°. The lug spacing and wheel slip were varied from 20, 30 to 40° and 20, 35 to 50% respectively. All the force measurements were done at a constant 7 cm sinkage. The results showed that increasing circumferntial angle up to 45° can reduce variation in lug wheel forces, at the same time it had little effect on the mean pull and lift values. The side force was affected by the changes of circumferential angle. The 20° lug spacing not only gave the minimum variations but also maximum mean lug forces. The highest lug wheel forces occurred at 35% wheel slip.  相似文献   

6.
Planetary rovers are different from conventional terrestrial vehicles in many respects, making it necessary to investigate the terramechanics with a particular focus on them, which is a hot research topic at the budding stage. Predicting the wheel-soil interaction performance from the knowledge of terramechanics is of great importance to the mechanical design/evaluation/optimization, dynamics simulation, soil parameter identification, and control of planetary rovers. In this study, experiments were performed using a single-wheel testbed for wheels with different radii (135 and 157.35 mm), widths (110 and 165 mm), lug heights (0, 5, 10, and 15 mm), numbers of lugs (30, 24, 15, and 8), and lug inclination angles (0°, 5°, 10°, and 20°) under different slip ratios (0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.6, etc.). The influences of the vertical load (30 N, 80 N, and 150 N), moving velocity (10, 25, 40, and 55 mm/s), and repetitive passing (four times) were also studied. Experimental results shown with figures and tables and are analyzed to evaluate the wheels’ driving performance in deformable soil and to draw conclusions. The driving performance of wheels is analyzed using absolute performance indices such as drawbar pull, driving torque, and wheel sinkage and also using relative indices such as the drawbar pull coefficient, tractive efficiency, and entrance angle. The experimental results and conclusions are useful for optimal wheel design and improvement/verification of wheel-soil interaction mechanics model. The analysis methods used in this paper, such as those considering the relationships among the relative indices, can be referred to for analyzing the performance of wheels of other vehicles.  相似文献   

7.
Open-source software (OSS) is free to use and has accessible source codes, thus, it can be modified by various users. By using OSS, it is possible to easily and economically develop a target program for interaction studies in terramechanics. Yet Another Dynamic Engine (YADE) is an OSS for the 3D discrete element method (DEM), but its applicability to various contact interaction problems in terramechanics is not well-known. To investigate the applicability of YADE in terramechanics, the tractive performance of a lugged wheel was analyzed in this study. An idea of a proportional-integral-differential control model was applied to realize the constant rotation of the wheel in YADE. Our previous experiments on the locomotion of a small lugged wheel on a lunar-soil simulant were analyzed by YADE, and the results were found to be qualitatively similar to the obtained experimental results when considering the effects of the lug height, lug thickness, lug number, and wheel diameter. By applying a quasi-2D analysis with the same soil bin width and wheel width, the computational load of 3D DEM by YADE can be reduced up to 36.8% with similar net traction behavior against the wheel slip in a 3D analysis.  相似文献   

8.
An indoor traction measurement system for agricultural tires   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To reliably study soil–wheel interactions, an indoor traction measurement system that allows creation of controlled soil conditions was developed. This system consisted of: (i) single wheel tester (SWT); (ii) mixing-and-compaction device (MCD) for soil preparation; (iii) soil bin; (iv) traction load device (TLD). The tire driving torque, drawbar pull, tire sinkage, position of tire lug, travel distance of the SWT and tire revolution angle were measured. It was observed that these measurements were highly reproducible under all experimental conditions. Also relationships of slip vs. sinkage and drawbar pull vs. slip showed high correlation. The tire driving torque was found to be directly influenced by the tire lug spacing. The effect of tire lug was also discussed in terms of tire slip.  相似文献   

9.
The measurement of soil reaction forces on a lug of a movable lug cage wheel was carried out in a soil bin. To elucidate the experimental results, a theoretical analysis of soil reaction forces on the lug of the movable lug cage wheel was made by using an analysis of the lug trajectory and a modified theory in soil–vehicle mechanics. The existing theory was modified and adjusted by considering the actual lug trajectory and the soil trench made by the preceding lug. The results showed that the theoretical analysis gave a good representation of the reaction forces measured experimentally. The higher pull and lift forces of the movable lug cage wheel compared with those of the fixed lug wheel was supported by the theoretical analysis. Although the theoretical representation of soil reaction forces should be improved by further works, it is sufficiently accurate to estimate the performance of the movable lug cage wheels by the proposed theory.  相似文献   

10.
Lugs (i.e., grousers) are routinely attached to the surfaces of wheels/tracks of mobile robots to enhance their ability to traverse loose sandy terrain. Much previous work has focused on how lug shape, e.g., height, affects performance; however, the goal of this study is to experimentally confirm the effects of lug motion on lug–soil forces. We measured normal and tangential forces acting on a single lug as functions of inclination angle, moving direction angle, sinkage length, horizontal displacement, and traveling speed. The experimental results were mathematically fitted by using least square method to facilitate quantitative analyses on effects of changes in these motion parameters. Moreover, we compared the measured tangential forces to values calculated from a conventional tangential force model to evaluate the effects of the lug-tip surface, which is generally ignored in existing terramechanics models. The conclusions from this study would be useful for estimating the traveling performance of locomotive mechanisms equipped with lugs, modeling interaction mechanics between lugged wheels and soil, etc.  相似文献   

11.
A new data acquisition system was introduced that could be used to monitor the real time wheel forces to solve the limitations of obtaining precise performance characteristics of actual cage wheels. Contrary to previous methods, in which the cage wheel forces were obtained by summing up the individual lug forces. The new method enables measurement of the components of lug force in three orthogonal directions simultaneously. A single unit dynamometer system, with two extended octagonal rings was designed and fabricated using a solid mild steel block, was able to measure force up to 5 kN in each direction. It was used in a soil-bin test rig to determine the characteristics of the forces produced by a cage wheel with opposing circumferential lugs. The characteristics of the pull and lift forces agreed with measured drawbar pull and calculated wheel forces respectively. The force signals fluctuated periodically with rotation angle and the corresponding period approximately equal to the interval of angular lug spacing. The side force fluctuated between positive and negative values and the average was closer to zero due to the balancing effect of opposing lugs. The new system showed better output compared to the previous attempts, confirming its applicability for accurate measurement of real time wheel forces.  相似文献   

12.
A work optimization strategy is combined with algorithms within the vehicle-terrain interface (VTI) model to maximize the traction of a four-wheel vehicle operating on loose dry sand. The optimization model distributes traction among the steered and non-steered wheels with the work optimum coefficient (WOC) of each wheel treated as an independent design objective. Drawbar pull (DBP), motion resistance (MR), longitudinal traction coefficient (LTC), lateral force coefficient (LFC), tire deflection, and wheel slip are key parameters that appear in the VTI model for traction performance analysis. The analysis includes wheels of different diameters, widths, heights, and inflation pressures, under variable wheel slips. A multi-objective optimization problem is formulated over a thirteen-dimensional search space bounded by eight design constraints. The generalized reduced gradient method is used to predict optimal values of the design variables as well as ground and traction parameters such as DBP, MR, LTC, and LFC for maximum slope climbing efficiency. The WOCs are maximized for lateral slip angles between 0° and 24° to find a set of Pareto optimal solutions over a wide range of weight factors. A method to apply the optimization results for predicting vehicle performance and traction control on dry sand is presented and discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We have been developing a simulation program for use with soil–wheel interaction problems by coupling Finite Element Method (FEM) and Discrete Element Method (DEM) for which a wheel is modeled by FEM and soil is expressed by DEM. Previous two-dimensional FE–DEM was updated to analyze the tractive performance of a flexible elastic wheel by introducing a new algorithm learned from the PID-controller model. In an elastic wheel model, four structural parts were defined using FEM: the wheel rim, intermediate part, surface layer, and wheel lugs. The wheel rigidity was controlled by varying the Young’s Modulus of the intermediate part. The tractive performance of two elastic wheels with lugs for planetary rovers of the European Space Agency was analyzed. Numerical results were compared with experimentally obtained results collected at DLR Bremen, Germany. The FE–DEM result was confirmed to depict similar behaviors of tractive performance such as gross tractive effort, net traction, running resistance, and wheel sinkage, as in the results of experiments. Moreover, the tractive performance of elastic wheels on Mars was predicted using FE–DEM. Results clarified that no significant difference of net traction exists between the two wheels.  相似文献   

14.
Low mass compact rovers provide cost effective means to explore extra-terrestrial terrains. Use of flexible wheels in such applications where the wheel size is restricted, improves traction at reduced slip and sinkage. Design of a flexible wheel for a given mission is a challenging task requiring consideration of stiffness of rim and spokes, stress induced in the wheel, chassis movement during wheel rotation and the operating mode of the wheel. Also, accurate mathematical models are required to save design and development time and reduce the number of prototypes for selection. It is observed that most of the research papers deal with performance testing of flexible wheels and information on analytical formulation is scarce. Therefore, in the present work, a methodology has been formulated to systematically design a flexible wheel for a low mass lunar rover. The prototype performance is tested and compared with analytical estimates and reasons for difference are investigated. Paper contains details of design criteria, mathematical modelling, realisation of wheel prototype, test fixture and analysis test comparison. Authors believe that this work provides a useful aid to the designer to systematically design flexible wheels for low mass lunar rovers.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this paper is to study the effect that the rear track width and additional weight placed on the wheels has on the stability of a tractor when driving on side slopes. With the help of a specially constructed test bench the reactions on the wheels under static load were measured for rear track width of 1500, 1650 and 1800 mm. The roll angle of the test bench was gradually increased. The analysis of the experimental results showed that the static limit of overturn was considerably improved, when the width of the rear track was 1650 mm and an additional weight had been used for the uphill wheel.  相似文献   

16.
This paper presents a numerical analysis on steering performance including tractive parameters and lug effects. To explore the difference between the turning and straight conditions of steering, a numerical sand model for steering is designed and appropriately established by the discrete element method on the basis of triaxial tests. From the point of mean values and variation, steering traction tests are conducted to analyze the tractive parameters including sinkage, torque and drawbar pull and the lug effects resulting from type, intersection and central angle. Analysis indicates that steering motion has less influence on the sinkage and torque. When the slip ratio exceeds 20%, the steering drawbar pull becomes increasingly smaller than in the straight condition, and the increase of steering radius contributes to a decline in mean values and a rise in variation. The lug effect of central angle is less influenced by the steering motion, but the lug intersection is able to significantly increase the steering drawbar pull along with the variation reduced. However, the lug inclination reduces the steering drawbar pull along with the variation raised in different degrees.  相似文献   

17.
The general mechanism of tractive performance of a four-wheel vehicle with rear-wheel drive moving up and down a sloped sandy soil has been considered theoretically. For the given vehicle dimensions and terrain-wheel system constants, the relationships among the effective tractive or braking effort of the vehicle, the amount of sinkage of the front and rear wheels, and the slip ratio were analysed by simulation. The optimum eccentricity of the vehicle’s center of gravity and the optimum application height of the drawbar-pull for obtaining the largest value of maximum effective tractive or braking effort could be calculated by means of the analytical simulation program. For a 5.88 kN weight vehicle, it was found that the optimum eccentricity of the center of gravity eopt was 1/6 for the range of slope angle—0βπ/24 rad during driving action of the rear wheel and eopt was also 1/6 for the range of slope angle—π/24β0 rad during braking action of the rear wheel. The optimum application height Hopt was found to be 35 cm for the range of slope angle 0βπ/24 rad during driving action of the rear wheel and Hopt was 0 cm for the range of slope angle—π/24β0 rad during braking action of the rear wheel.  相似文献   

18.
Driving wheels with low-pressure lugged tires are standard propulsion components of wheeled off-road vehicles. Such wheels have been mostly treated in theory as shorter tracks or even as “black boxes”. These procedures, however, appear not to be necessary since an updated theory of thrust generation, based on experiments with double-plate meter, was presented at the 2008 ISTVS Turin conference. This theory is based on the compaction-sliding (CS) concept, which claims that the rearward displacement of soil, a reason for slip, starts as horizontal soil compression by lugs (C-stage at lower thrust), followed by the slide of sheared off soil blocks (S-stage at higher thrust). The thrust in terms of ISTVS Standards equals gross tractive effort minus internal rolling resistance of a tire. The resultant thrust of a tire equals the sum of component thrusts of individual soil segments. The respective technique provides thrust-slip curves, which reflect tire size, loading, inflation pressure and tread pattern design, e.g. tread density, lug angle, pitch, height and tire casing lay-out and thus can be useful notably in assessing the traction properties of new tire designs. Concerning the evaluation of tire traction tests or similar applications, the CS approach offers a simplified version of thrust-slip formula (G-function), which complies with the CS concept and is easy to use.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of width on the rolling resistance of rigid wheels in sand is shown to be very strong, coefficient of rolling resistance increasing rapidly with width at each of the sinkage levels used in the experiments. Wheel skid also increased rapidly as wheel width increased. Prediction of measured results on the narrow wheels using the modified Bekker analysis was quite good although this is shown to be partly fortuitous. Poor correlation was found between measured values of coefficient of rolling resistance and the Freitag sand number. Very good prediction of measured values of coefficient of rolling resistance was found using an expression comprising the square root of the sinkage/dia ratio multiplied by a factor correcting for width/dia ratio. The square root of the sinkage/dia ratio is shown to be the value of coefficient of rolling resistance of a narrow wheel at shallow sinkage predicted from the modified Bekker analysis. It is also shown to be identical to the inverse of the Freitag clay number, with soil cone index value replaced by mean soil radial stress.  相似文献   

20.
A comprehensive method for prediction of off-road driven wheel performance is presented, assuming a parabolic wheel–soil contact surface. The traction performance of a driven wheel is predicted for both driving and braking modes. Simulations show significant non-symmetry of the traction performance of the driving and braking wheels. The braking force is significantly greater than the traction force reached in the driving mode. In order to apply the suggested model for prediction of the traction performance of a 4WD vehicle, the load transfer effect was considered. Simulated traction performances of front and rear driven wheels differ significantly, due to the load transfer. In the driving mode, the rear driven wheel develops a net traction force greater than that of the front wheel. On the other hand, in the braking mode the front driven wheel develops a braking force significantly greater than that of the rear driven wheel due to a pushed/pulled force affected by the load transfer. The suggested model was successfully verified by the data reported in literature and by full-scale field experiments with a special wheel-testing device. The developed approach may improve the prediction of off-road multi-drive vehicle traction performance.  相似文献   

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