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Linkage (mechanical)

 
Linkage (mechanical)

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Linkage (mechanical)



 
 
A mechanical linkage is a series of rigid links connected with joints to form a closed chain, or a series of closed chains. This is created by two or more levers that are put together. Each link has two or more joints, and the joints have various degrees of freedom
Degrees of freedom (engineering)

In classical mechanics, degrees of freedom are the set of independent displacement s and/or rotations that specify completely the displaced or deformed position and orientation of the body or system....
 to allow motion between the links.






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Encyclopedia


Locking Pliers
A mechanical linkage is a series of rigid links connected with joints to form a closed chain, or a series of closed chains. This is created by two or more levers that are put together. Each link has two or more joints, and the joints have various degrees of freedom
Degrees of freedom (engineering)

In classical mechanics, degrees of freedom are the set of independent displacement s and/or rotations that specify completely the displaced or deformed position and orientation of the body or system....
 to allow motion between the links. A linkage is called a mechanism
Machine

A machine is any device that uses energy to perform some activity. In common usage, the meaning is that of a device having parts that perform or assist in performing any type of work....
 if two or more links are movable with respect to a fixed link. Mechanical linkages are usually designed to take an input and produce a different output, altering the motion, velocity, acceleration, and applying mechanical advantage
Mechanical advantage

In physics and engineering, mechanical advantage is the factor by which a mechanism multiplies the force or torque put into it. Generally, the mechanical advantage is calculated as follows:...
.

A linkage designed to be stationary is called a structure.

History

Centrifugal Governor
Mechanical linkages are a fundamental part of machine design, and yet many simple linkages were not well understood nor invented until the 19th century. Consider a stick: it has six degrees of freedom, three of which are the coordinates of its centre in space, the other three describing its rotation. Once nudged between a boulder
Boulder

In geology, a boulder is a rock with Particle size of usually no less than 256 mm diameter. While a boulder may be small enough to move or roll manually, others are extremely massive....
 and fulcrum
Fulcrum

Fulcrum may refer to one of the following.*Fulcrum, the pivot on which a lever moves*Fulcrum Wheels, a bicycle wheel manufacturer, based in Italy...
 it is constrained to a particular motion, to act as a lever
Lever

In physics, a lever is a rigid object that is used with an appropriate fulcrum or wiktionary:pivot point to multiply the mechanical force that can be applied to another object....
 to move the boulder. When more links are added and joined in various ways their collective motion can be further defined. Very complicated and precise motions can be designed into a linkage with only a few parts.

The Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution was a period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries when major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, production, and transportation had a profound effect on the socioeconomics and cultural conditions in United Kingdom....
 was the golden age of mechanical linkages. Mathematical, engineering and manufacturing advances provided both the need and the ability to create new mechanisms. Many simple mechanisms that seem obvious today required some of the greatest minds of the era to create. Leonhard Euler
Leonhard Euler

Leonhard Paul Euler was a pioneering Swiss mathematician and physicist who spent most of his life in Russia and Germany.Euler made important discoveries in fields as diverse as calculus and graph theory....
 was one of the first mathematicians to study linkage synthesis, and James Watt
James Watt

James Watt was a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer whose improvements to the steam engine were fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both the Kingdom of Great Britain and the world....
 worked very hard to invent the Watt linkage
Parallel motion

This article concerns parallel motion in mechanics. For parallel motion in music, see the article Contrary motion.The parallel motion is a linkage invented by the Scotland engineering James Watt in 1784 for his double-acting steam engine....
 to support his steam engine
Steam engine

File:Steam-powered fire engine.jpgA steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid.Steam engines have a long history, going back at least 2000 years....
's piston. Chebyshev worked on mechanical linkage design for over thirty years, which led to his work on polynomials
Chebyshev polynomials

In mathematics the Chebyshev polynomials, named after Pafnuty Chebyshev, are a polynomial sequence of orthogonal polynomials which are related to de Moivre's formula and which are easily defined recursively, like Fibonacci numbers or Lucas numbers....
2
Linkage (mechanical)

A mechanical linkage is a series of rigid links connected with joints to form a closed chain, or a series of closed chains. This is created by two or more levers that are put together....
. New linkage inventions, designed by need, were instrumental in cloth making
Power loom

File:Strickmaschine im Museum.JPGThe first power loom, a mechanized loom powered by a drive shaft, was designed in 1784 by Edmund Cartwright and first built in 1785, it was refined over the next 47 years till a design by Kenworthy and Bullough, made the operation completely automatic....
, power conversion and speed regulation. Even the ability of a mechanism to produce accurate linear motion, without a reference guide way, took years to solve.

Scientists, mostly German, Russian and English, have researched this domain over the last 200 years, so that today most traditional analysis or synthesis problems (e.g. planar movement) have been solved (see online libraries under External links). Recently, compliant structures have come to the fore.

Electronic technology has replaced many linkage applications taken for granted today, such as mechanical computation, typewriting and machining. However, modern linkage design continues to advance, and designs that used to occupy an engineer for days are now optimized with a computer in seconds.

Even though servomechanism
Servomechanism

A servomechanism, or servo is an automatic device that uses error-sensing feedback to correct the performance of a mechanism. The term correctly applies only to systems where the feedback or error-correction signals help control mechanical position or other parameters....
s with digital control are common, and at first glance easy to use, some motion problems (especially for quick and accurate movements) are still only soluble using linkages and cams.

Theory

The most common linkages have one degree of freedom, meaning that there is one input motion that produces one output motion. Most linkages are also planar, meaning all the motion takes place in one plane. Spatial linkages (non-planar) are more difficult to design and therefore not as common.

Kutzbach-Gruebler's equation is used to calculate the degrees of freedom of linkages. The number of degrees of freedom of a linkage is also called its mobility.

A simplified version of the Kutzbach-Gruebler's equation for planar linkages : = mobility = degrees of freedom = number of links (including a single ground link) = number of one-degree-of-freedom kinematic pairs (pin or slider joints)

Linkage Mobility



A more general form of the Kutzbach-Gruebler equation for planar linkages involving more complex joints: Or, for spatial linkages (linkages involving 3D motion): = mobility (degrees of freedom) = number of links (including a single ground link) = number of total joints, regardless of connectivity or degree-of-freedom = sum of each joint's individual degree of freedom

The mobility of hydraulic machinery
Hydraulic machinery

Hydraulic machinery are machines and tools which use fluid power to do work. Engineering vehicle is a common example.In this type of machine, high-pressure liquid ? called hydraulic fluid ? is transmitted throughout the machine to various hydraulic motors and hydraulic cylinders....
 can easily be identified by counting the number of independently controlled hydraulic cylinders.

Linkage Path
Types of common joints
Kinematic pair

A kinematic pair is the general name for two rigid body that can move with respect to each other via a mechanics constraint between the two bodies....
:
  • Revolute
    Revolute joint

    File:Revolute joint.svgA revolute joint is a one Degrees of freedom kinematic pair used in mechanisms. Revolute joints provide single-axis rotation function used in many places such as door hinges, folding mechanisms, and other uni-axial rotation devices....
     or pin, one DOF rotation. Examples are; bushings, bearings, bolted joints, rivets and hinges.
  • Prismatic
    Prismatic joint

    File:Prismatic joint.svgA prismatic joint is a one Degrees of freedom kinematic pair used in mechanisms. Prismatic joints provide single-axis sliding function used in places such as hydraulic and pneumatic cylinders....
     or slider, one or two DOF linear motion. Examples are; linear bearings, hydraulic cylinders, rollers and pistons.
  • Spherical or ball and socket, three DOF rotation, usually restricted to one DOF by other joints in the mechanism.


Designers will synthesize a linkage by starting with the required output motion, mechanical advantage, velocity and acceleration. A type of linkage is chosen and modified to deliver the required performance.

Each link is treated as a vector and the vectors can be combined into a system of equations because they form a loop. The matrix is solved to create a closed form equation that relates input motion to output motion. The same is done for mechanical advantage
Mechanical advantage

In physics and engineering, mechanical advantage is the factor by which a mechanism multiplies the force or torque put into it. Generally, the mechanical advantage is calculated as follows:...
, or any other important quantity. The equations of motion are differentiated
Derivative

In calculus, a branch of mathematics, the derivative is a measure of how a function changes as its input changes. Loosely speaking, a derivative can be thought of as how much a quantity is changing at a given point....
 with respect to time to find velocity and acceleration of the mechanism parts.

Types of linkages

Four bar linkage
Four bar linkage

A four bar linkage or simply a 4-bar or four-bar is the simplest movable linkage . It consists of 4 rigid bodies , each attached to two others by single joints or pivots to form a closed loop....
s are the simplest closed loop kinematic linkage. They perform a wide variety of motions with a few simple parts. They were also popular in the past due to the ease of calculations, prior to computers, compared to more complicated mechanisms.

Linkage Four Bar



Other notable types of linkages;

Linkage Function Generator
  • Pantograph
    Pantograph

    A pantograph is a Linkage connected in a special manner based on parallelograms so that the movement of one specified point is an amplified version of the movement of another point....
     (four-bar, two DOF)
  • Crank-slider, (four-bar, one DOF)
  • Grashof, (four-bar, one DOF) At least one link can rotate 360°
  • Five bar linkages often have meshing gears for two of the links, creating a one DOF linkage. They can provide greater power transmission with more design flexibility than four bar linkages.
  • Six bar, single DOF linkages offer greater design flexibility than four bar linkages, but require more parts and are more difficult to design:3
    Linkage (mechanical)

    A mechanical linkage is a series of rigid links connected with joints to form a closed chain, or a series of closed chains. This is created by two or more levers that are put together....
    • Watt kinematic chain
    • Watt I, II
    • Stephenson kinematic chain
    • Stephenson I, II, III
      • Klann Linkage
        Klann Linkage

        The Klann linkage is a planar mechanism designed to simulate the gait of legged animal and function as a wheel replacement. The linkage consists of the frame, a crank, two grounded rockers, and two couplers all connected by pivot joints....
         which functions as a walking mechanism creating nearly straight line output from a rotary input; six-bar, one DOF.


  • Parallel and Straight line mechanism
    Straight line mechanism

    In the late seventeenth century, before the development of the milling machine, it was extremely difficult to machine straight, flat surfaces. For this reason, good prismatic pairs without backlash were not easy to make....
    s:
    • James Watt's Parallel motion
      Parallel motion

      This article concerns parallel motion in mechanics. For parallel motion in music, see the article Contrary motion.The parallel motion is a linkage invented by the Scotland engineering James Watt in 1784 for his double-acting steam engine....
       and Watt's linkage
      Watt's linkage

      Watt's linkage is a type of mechanical linkage invented by James Watt to constrain the movement of a steam engine piston in a straight line....
    • Peaucellier-Lipkin linkage
      Peaucellier-Lipkin linkage

      The Peaucellier-Lipkin linkage , invented in 1864, was the first linkage capable of transforming rotary motion into perfect straight-line motion, and vice versa....
      , the first linkage to create a straight line output from rotary input; eight-bar, one DOF.
    • A Scott Russell linkage
      Scott Russell linkage

      A Scott Russell linkage converts linear motion, to linear motion in a line perpendicular to the input. These linkages are often used in front wheel drive vehicles with solid rear axles to control lateral movement, as they do not share the disadvantages of the asymmetric Panhard rod and are simpler and more compact than Watt's linkage....
      , which converts linear motion, to (almost) linear motion in a line perpendicular to the input.
    • Chebyshev linkage
      Chebyshev linkage

      The Hoekens linkage is a four bar mechanism that converts rotational motion to approximate straight-line motion....
      , which provides nearly straight motion of a point with a four-bar linkage.
    • Hoekens linkage, which provides nearly straight motion of a point with a four-bar linkage.
    • Sarrus linkage
      Sarrus linkage

      The Sarrus linkage, invented in 1853 by Pierre Fr?d?ric Sarrus, is a Linkage to convert a limited circular motion to a linear motion without reference guideways....
      , which provides motion of one surface in a direction normal to another.


Uses

Linkage Spacial 3dofl
Linkages are primarily used as machine
Machine

A machine is any device that uses energy to perform some activity. In common usage, the meaning is that of a device having parts that perform or assist in performing any type of work....
 components and tool
Tool

A broad definition of a tool is an entity used to interface between two or more domains that facilitates more effective action of one domain upon the other....
s. Typical examples are automotive suspensions
Suspension (vehicle)

Suspension is the term given to the system of spring , shock absorbers and Linkage that connects a vehicle to its wheels. Suspension systems serve a dual purpose ? contributing to the car's car handling and brake for good active safety and driving pleasure, and keeping vehicle occupants comfortable and reasonably well isolated from road no...
 and bolt cutters
Bolt cutters

A bolt cutter, sometimes called bolt cropper, is a tool used for cutting chains, padlocks, bolts and wire mesh. It typically has long handles and short blades, with compound hinges to maximize leverage and cutting force....
. The internal combustion engine's piston/rod/crank is a classic four-bar linkage with one degree of freedom. Linkages are often the simplest, least expensive and most efficient mechanism to perform complicated motions.

One highly visible application is the windshield wiper: a four bar linkage changes the motor's rotary motion to oscillation. Some wipers also have a second set of four bar linkages to keep the wiper blades oriented correctly as they sweep. Another visible application is heavy equipment which makes extensive use of four and six bar linkages.

Spatial linkages are becoming more common due to computer aided design.

"The 4-Bar Linkage" is an adapted mechanical linkage used on bicycles. With a normal full-suspension bike the back wheel moves in a very tight arc shape. This means that more power is lost when going uphill. With a bike fitted with a 4-Bar Linkage, the wheel moves in such a large arc that it is moving almost vertically. This way the power loss is reduced by up to 30%.

See also


External links

  • Contains a chapters on Watt's and other linkages.
  • An (at present mainly German) online library about linkages and cams is available through (in German: Digitale Mechanismen- und Getriebebibliothek)
  • With there is also an English online library (contains foreign literature too)
  • [commercial link] User-friendly software for design, motion/force analysis & optimization of planar linkage, gear and belt mechanisms