For a close-coiled helical spring (stiffness calculation), which expression correctly gives the axial stiffness k = W/δ in terms of material and geometric parameters?

Difficulty: Medium

Correct Answer: k = (G * d^4) / (8 * n * D^3)

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Close-coiled helical springs under axial load primarily deform by torsion of the wire. The spring stiffness (load per unit deflection) depends on the shear modulus and the spring’s wire/coil geometry. This relationship is essential for designing springs to meet load–deflection requirements.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Close-coiled spring; helix angle is small.
  • Axial load W produces wire torsion dominated deformation.
  • Material characterized by shear modulus G (not Young’s modulus E).
  • Symbols: d = wire diameter, D = mean coil diameter, n = number of active coils.


Concept / Approach:
The classic formula for axial deflection δ of a close-coiled spring is δ = (8 * W * D^3 * n) / (G * d^4). Inverting gives stiffness k = W / δ = (G * d^4) / (8 * n * D^3). Note the strong dependence on d (to the 4th power) and the inverse cubic dependence on D, reflecting torsional compliance of the wire around the coil diameter.


Step-by-Step Solution:
Start from δ = (8 * W * D^3 * n) / (G * d^4).Rearrange: k = W / δ = (G * d^4) / (8 * n * D^3).Confirm units: G has units of stress; geometric ratios render k in force/length.


Verification / Alternative check:
Compare with design handbooks; expression matches standard spring design equations for close-coiled springs.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Using E instead of G: Spring twist depends on shear modulus G.
  • Other exponents or constants (D^4, 16, D^2) do not match the derived relation.


Common Pitfalls:
Substituting E for G; forgetting that only active coils count in n; ignoring effects of end conditions on effective coil count.



Final Answer:
k = (G * d^4) / (8 * n * D^3)

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