Spring (device)

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Image:Springs 009.jpg

A spring is a flexible elastic object used to store mechanical energy. Springs are usually made out of hardened steel. Small springs can be wound from pre-hardened stock, while larger ones are made from annealed steel and hardened after fabrication. Some non-ferrous metals are also used including phosphor bronze for parts requiring corrosion resistance and beryllium copper for springs carrying electrical current (because of its low electrical resistance).

Contents

Types of spring

Image:Ressort de compression.jpg The most common types of spring are:

  • the helical or coil spring (made by winding a wire around a cylinder) and the conical spring - these are types of torsion spring, because the wire itself is twisted when the spring is compressed or stretched. These are in turn of two types:
    • Tension springs are designed to become longer under load. Their turns are normally touching in the unloaded position, and they have a hook, eye or some other means of attachement at each end.
    • Compression springs are designed to become shorter when loaded. Their turns are not touching in the unloaded position, and they need no attachment points.
  • the leaf spring (flat springy sheet, used in vehicle suspensions. electrical switches, bows).
  • the spiral spring (also known as a "clock spring") (used in clocks, galvanometers, and places where electricity must be carried to partially-rotating devices such as steering wheels).
  • the cantilever spring which is fixed only at one end.

Other types include:

  • the Belleville washer or Belleville spring, a disc shaped spring commonly used to apply tension to a bolt (and also in the initiation mechanism of pressure-activated landmines).
  • the spring washer, used to apply a constant tensile force along the axis of a fastener.
  • the torsion spring (any spring designed to be twisted rather than compressed or extended).
  • the gas spring, a volume of gas which is compressed.
  • rubber band, a tension spring where energy is stored by stretching the material.

Theory

In classical physics, a spring can be seen as a device that stores potential energy by straining the bonds between the atoms of an elastic material.

Hooke's law of elasticity states that the extension of an elastic rod (its distended length minus its relaxed length) is linearly proportional to its tension, the force used to stretch it. Similarly, the contraction (negative extension) is proportional to the compression (negative tension).

This law actually holds only approximately, and only when the deformation (extension or contraction) is small compared to the rod's overall length. For deformations beyond the elastic limit, atomic bonds get broken or rearranged, and a spring may snap, buckle, or permanently deform. Many materials have no clearly defined elastic limit, and Hooke's law can not be meaningfully applied to these materials.

Hooke's law is actually a mathematical consequence of the fact that the potential energy of the rod is a minimum when it has its relaxed length. Any smooth function of one variable approximates a quadratic function when examined near enough to its minimum point; and therefore the force — which is the derivative of energy with respect to displacement — will approximate a linear function.

Toys

See: Slinky

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