Lexikon Kammerer Gewinde

Temperature Difference

The temperature difference describes the disparity between two temperature states of a component, system or its surroundings. In mechanical engineering, it often refers to the difference between operating and ambient temperatures, or to temperature differences within a component, e.g. along a spindle.

Temperature differences lead to:

  • Thermal linear expansion of components
  • Adjustment of play and preload
  • Position and path deviations
  • Additional internal tensions

Even in screw drives, even small temperature differences can have a measurable effect.

Technical context

The change in length caused by a temperature difference ΔT is calculated as follows:

ΔL=αLΔT\Delta L = \alpha \cdot L \cdot \Delta T

α = Coefficient of thermal expansion
L = Component length
ΔT = Temperature difference

Practical relevance

  • Differences in the temperature of the spindle and nut can alter the preload
  • Temperature variations along the spindle cause deformation and a loss of accuracy
  • Important for high-precision CNC and measurement systems
  • Accounting for this through temperature compensation, cooling or the selection of suitable materials
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