Home|News|Literature|Journal|Instruction|Forum|Member|Introduction

Chinese  Old version

By    In    Search 

  HomeContents of Chinese Journal of Mechanical Engineering (English Edition),2007 No.2EXPERIMENTAL AND NUMERICAL RESEARCH ON BULLDOZER WORKING PROCESS


LI Yanjie

XU Yong

HUANG Wenbin
College of Science,
China Agricultural University,
Beijing 100083, China


FENG Y T

OWEN D R J
Civil & Computational Engineering Center,
University of Wales Swansea,
Swansea SA2 8PP, UK

 

 

EXPERIMENTAL AND NUMERICAL RESEARCH ON BULLDOZER WORKING PROCESS* 

 

Abstract: A simulative analysis coupled with experiment on behaviors of a soil bed cut by a model bulldozer blade is carried out using the finite element/distinct element method (FE/DEM) facility built in the ELFEN package. Before simulation, the soil specimens are examined through uniaxial tensile/compression, triaxial compression and direct shear tests to obtain model characteristics and relevant parameters, then soil cutting experiments are carried out via a mini-soil bin system with a soil bed of 60/120 mm in width and 10 mm in depth cut by a 1/9 scale model bulldozer blade moving with the velocity of 10 mm/s. The soil constitutive model includes the tensile elastic model for tensile breakage and the compressive elastoplastic relationship with Mohr-Coulomb criterion. The cutting length in simulation is set as 1/4 of that in the experiment divided into 1 869 triangular elements. The comparison between the simulated results and experimental ones shows that the used model is capable of analyzing soil dynamic behaviors qualitatively, and the predicted fracturing profiles in general conform to the experiment. Hence the feasibility for analyzing soil fracturing behaviors in tillage or other similar processes is validated.

Key words: Finite element method Discrete element method Finite element/distinct element method (FE/DEM) Soil Bulldozer

 


*This project is supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 10372113) and Royal Society-NSFC China-UK Joint Project (No. 16468). Received September 7, 2006; received in revised form December 14, 2006; accepted December 22, 2006

 

Open or Download Full Text of this Paper (PDF File)

About us-Contact us-Site map-Advertisement service-Cooperation-Legal statement

Address: 22 Baiwanzhuang Dajie, Beijing 100037 China    Tel: 8610-88379907    Fax: 8610-68994557

E-mail: cjme@mail.machineinfo.gov.cn  http: //www.cjmenet.com
©2006 Editorial Office of CJME. All Right Reserved