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Abstract
High bearing load roller shafts are made of high performance steels as they are subjected to severe fatigue conditions, which combine a shrink-fit load and a rotating bending. Alternating stress intensity for fatigue analysis under said conditions, using elastic and maximum shear stress theories, shows a waving behaviour within a short distance near the contact edge. This discovery is observed by using structured 3D finite element models with surface-to-surface contact and element sizes varying from a coarse size far from the contact edge down to the order of sliding displacement near the contact edge. These FE models provide proof that stresses near the contact edge increase indefinitely when element size reduces. It is also found that the maximum alternating stress intensity at the depth of one ten-thousandth of the shaft diameter, using the friction coefficient of 0.01 in FE models, gives a good comparison with empirical fatigue data of classic shrink-fit assemblies for a wide range of geometry and loading.
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