Abstract

The performance of natural rubber sports balls under impact conditions is dominated by the material's behaviour under high strain rate conditions dictated by the impact velocity and ball dimensions. To design improved products, sports ball manufacturers need to better understand the physical phenomena associated with ball impact against both rigid and deformable surfaces. This understanding will provide the foundation for performance prediction and optimisation design tools as well as more appropriate product and ultimately material testing techniques. Rebound characteristics of pressurised and pressureless tennis balls and their respective rubber cores subject to normal impacts are presented for a range of incident velocities. High-speed video analysis has been used to measure coefficient of restitution, impact duration and 'whole ball' deformation to validate a surface-normal impact finite element method based predictive model as the first step towards a more comprehensive oblique impact model. Accounting for strain rate dependent stiffness and damping material properties has achieved close correlations between model predictions and observed impact behaviour. The propagation of dominant bending and hoop-strain waves through the ball during the impact is revealed to illustrate the methodology's effectiveness in predicting ball performance associated with difficult to observe impact phenomena.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call