Computational Mechanics Laboratory (CompMechLab)
 
Login:
Password:
New User  
Russian  English  Chinese  Spanish  RSS News
Home / CompMechLab
CompMechLab AVI-Gallery

FE simulation of quasi-static crack growth in plates
AVI-Gallery contains more than 150 animations illustrating analysis results obtained with use of ANSYS and LS-DYNA FE software. AVI-Gallery
FEA.ru Users
Overall: 2213
New Today: 0
Latest: FSB

Why to register?
Only registered users have full access to special sections AVI-Gallery and FEA Research of CompMechLab.
Register Now!
Survey
What CAD system do You use?

AutoCAD
Autodesk Inventor
CATIA
CADKEY
EUCLID
I-DEAS
MicroStation
Power Solution
PRO/Engineer
SolidEdge
SolidWorks
Think3
Unigraphics
Other


Results | Polls

Votes: 3072

0

November 25, 2010 | Hi-Tech News

Puncture-proof Spring Tire picks up 2010 R&D 100 Award

Following a request from NASA, Goodyear last year developed an airless tire. The Spring Tire has now been recognized with a so-called “Oscar of Innovation” at the 44th Annual R&D 100 Awards in Orlando, Florida.



Following a request from NASA, Goodyear last year developed an airless tire. The Spring Tire has now been recognized with a so-called “Oscar of Innovation” at the 44th Annual R&D 100 Awards in Orlando, Florida.

The R&D Awards were established in 1963 by the editors of R&D Magazine to identify the 100 most significant, newly introduced research and development advances in multiple disciplines. The Spring Tire received a 2010 R&D 100 Award in the Mechanical Devices category.

The Spring Tire designed to transport large, long-range vehicles across the surface of celestial bodies such as the Moon or Mars. “This tire is extremely durable and extremely energy efficient,” noted Jim Benzing, Goodyear’s lead innovator on the project. The tire, constructed out of 800 load bearing springs, is designed to carry much heavier vehicles (up to 10 times) over much greater distances (up to 100 times) than the wire mesh tire that Goodyear helped develop for the Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV).

The development of the Spring Tire, like the original Apollo lunar mission tires, was driven by the fact that traditional rubber, pneumatic tires used on Earth aren’t suited to the Moon. This is because rubber properties vary significantly between the extreme cold and hot temperatures experienced in the shaded and directly sunlit areas of the Moon. Additionally, unfiltered solar radiation degrades rubber, posing an unacceptable risk of deflation for traditional pneumatic tires. And with the Moon being outside of any roadside assistance service area and lunar missions looking to minimize cargo, a spare could be hard to come by.

The Spring Tire was installed on NASA’s Lunar Electric Rover test vehicle last year and was put through its paces at the “Rock Yard” at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, where Goodyear says it performed successfully.

Another advantage of the Spring Tire is its ultra-redundancy. Vivake Asnani (principal investigator for the project at NASA’s Glenn Research Centre in Cleveland) points out that the tire doesn’t have a “single point failure mode” like pneumatic tires. Where one hard impact can cause a puncture and deflate a pneumatic tire, such an impact would damage only one of the Spring Tire’s 800 load bearing springs. Additionally, the Spring Tire’s combination of overall stiffness and flexibility allows off-road vehicles to travel fast over rough terrain with relatively little motion being transferred to the vehicle, says Asnani.

Goodyear says the tire might also have applications on Earth but hasn’t announced any plans to release it for Earth-bound vehicles just yet. The Spring Tire also isn't the only airless tire technology staking a claim for Moon missions. A Tweel-based Lunar Wheel from Michelin is also being evaluated by NASA for use in future Moon missions.

The publication has been prepared by CompMechLab®  employees on the Gizmag.




News Tags: [NASA]  

Read more on the subject: