Moments of Inertia Area Moment of Inertia
Moments of Inertia Area Moment of Inertia
Moments of Inertia Area Moment of Inertia
Moments of Inertia
Area Moment of Inertia
Definition of Moments of Inertia For Areas,
Radius of Gyration of An Area
Today’s Objectives:
Students will be able to: In-Class Activities:
a) Define the moments of inertia (MoI) • Check Homework, if any
for an area.
• Reading Quiz
b) Determine the MoI for an area by
integration. • Applications
• MoI: Concept and Definition
• MoI by Integration
• Concept Quiz
• Group Problem Solving
• Attention Quiz
Reading Quiz
1. The definition of the Moment of Inertia for an area involves an
integral of the form
A) x dA. B) x2 dA.
C) x2 dm. D) m dA.
Mo = F x d
What is Moment of Inertia ( MoI )?
It is the moment required by a solid body to
overcome it’s resistance to rotation.
It is resistance of bending moment of a beam
It is the second moment of mass (mr2) or second m1
moment of area (ar2), it’s unit is ( m4 ) or ( kgm2 )
Moment of inertia :
It is the mass property of a rigid body that determines the
torque needed for a desired angular acceleration about an axis m1 = m2
of rotation.
Moment of inertia depends on the shape of the body and
may be different around different axes of rotation. m2
A larger moment of inertia around a given axis requires
more torque to increase the rotation, or to stop the rotation of ( m1 ) has a larger ( MoI )
a body about that axis.
than ( m2 ), so it needs more
torque to rotate it.
4
Applications
10cm 3cm P
10cm
1cm x
(A) (B) (C) R S
1cm
Consider three different possible cross-sectional shapes and areas for the
beam RS. All have the same total area and, assuming they are made of
same material, they will have the same mass per unit length.
For the given vertical loading P on the beam shown on the right,
which shape will develop less internal stress and deflection? Why?
The answer depends on the MoI of the beam about the x-axis. It turns
out that Section A has the highest MoI because most of the area is
farthest from the x axis. Hence, it has the least stress and deflection.
10.1 Definition of Moments of Inertia for Areas
For the differential area dA, shown in the
figure:
d Ix = y2 dA ,
d Iy = x2 dA , and,
d JO = r2 dA , where JO is the polar
moment of inertia about the pole O or z axis.
The moments of inertia for the entire area are obtained by
integration.
Ix = A y2 dA ; Iy = A x2 dA
JO = A r2 dA = A ( x2 + y2 ) dA = Ix + Iy
The MoI is also referred to as the second moment of an area and
has units of length to the fourth power (m4 or in4).
MoI For an Area by Integration
For simplicity, the area element used has a
differential size in only one direction
(dx or dy). This results in a single integration
and is usually simpler than doing a double
integration with two differentials, i.e., dx·dy.
dA = a. dy
b 2 a
Ix =
0 y . a. dy dy
y
= [ a .y3/3]b0 = ab3/3 in4 x
Iy = x2 dA y dx
dA = b. dx
x b
Iy = 0 x . b. adx
a2
x
= [ b .x3/3]0 = ba3/3 in4
EXAMPLE
Given: The shaded area shown in the
figure.
Find: The MoI of the area about the
(x,y) x- and y-axes.
Plan: Follow the steps given earlier.
Solution:
Ix = y2 dA
dA = (1 – x) dy = (1 – y3/2) dy
12
Ix = 0 y (1 – y3/2) dy
= [ (1/3) y3 – (2/9) y9/2 ] 01 = 0.111 m4
EXAMPLE (continued)
Iy = x2 dA = x2 y dx
= x2 (x2/3) dx
(x,y) 1
= 0 x8/3 dx
1
= [ (3/11) x 11/3
]0
= 0.273 m 4
I x =∫ d I x
y
dx
1 3
I x= 𝑏 h
30
GROUP PROBLEM SOLVING (continued)
The moment of inertia about the y-axis
2
I y =∫ x dA (x,y)
where
y
dx
1 3
I y= 𝑏 h
6
ATTENTION QUIZ
1. When determining the MoI of the
element in the figure, dIy equals
(x,y)
A) x 2 dy B) x 2 dx y2 = x
C) (1/3) y3 dx D) x 2.5 dx
A
• Iy = Iy + A d2x d
dy
• Jo = Jc + A d2 O x
10.4 Moments of Inertia for Composite Areas
• The composite area is composed of areas with many simple
geometries
• The moment of inertia of composite areas can be found by the
sum of individual moment of inertia with sign (holes are negative)
Procedure for Analysis
Composite areas
• Divide a composite area into simple geometrical areas and locate
the centroids of each of the areas and find the moment of inertias
about each of their own centroids
Parallel Axis Theorem
• Apply the parallel axis theorem to calculate the moment of inertia
about the required axis
Summation
• Sum all of the moment of inertia, beware of signs
2
2
Procedure for Analysis
1. Divide the area into simpler parts
2. Indicate the perpendicular distance from the centroid of
each part to the reference axis
3. Find moment of inertia of each part about its centroidal axis
4. Use parallel-axis theorem to find moments of inertia about
the reference axis (I = ¯I + A d2 )
5. Find moment of inertia of the entire area by summing
moments of inertia of all parts algebraically
6. If a composite body has a hole, then its moment of inertia is
found by subtracting the moment of inertia for the hole
from the moment of inertia of the entire part including the
hole.
Area Moment of Inertia of Common Shapes: Lecture 10
24
Example 10.4 ( composite area ): Lecture 10
25
Example 4 ( composite area ): Lecture 10
26
Lecture 10
Continue Example 4 ( composite area ):
27
Problem 10–25.
Determine the moment of inertia of the composite area about the
x axis.
Problem: *10–32.: Determine the moment of inertia Ix of the
shaded area about the x axis.
Thus,
Problem 10-98: The pendulum consists of the 3-kg slender rod and
the 5-kg thin plate. Determine the location of the center of mass G of
the pendulum; then find the mass moment of inertia of the pendulum
about an axis perpendicular to the page and passing through G.