TITEL
On the effects of surface roughness in lubrication
FöRFATTARE
Almqvist, Andreas
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad fysik, maskin- och materialteknik / Maskinelement
SAMMANFATTNING
Tribology is a multidisciplinary field defined as the science and
technology of interacting surfaces in relative motion, and embraces the
study of friction, wear and lubrication. A typical tribological application
is the rolling element bearing. Tribological contacts may also be found in
other types of bearings, cam-mechanisms, gearboxes and hydraulic systems.
Examples of bearings inside the human body are the operation of the human
hip joint and the contact between teeth during chewing. To fully understand
the operation of this type of application one has to understand the
couplings between the lubricant fluid dynamics, the structural dynamics of
the bearing material, the thermodynamical aspects and the resulting
chemical reactions. This makes modeling tribological applications an
extremely delicate task. Because of the multidisciplinary nature, such
theoretical models lead to mathematical descriptions generally in the form
of non-linear integro-differential systems of equations. Some of these
systems of equations are sufficiently well posed to allow numerical
solutions to be carried out, resulting in accurate predictions on
performance.
In this work, the influence on performance of a surface microscopical
nature, the surface roughness, in contact interfaces between different
types of machine element components is the subject of study. An example is
the non-conformal lubricated contact between one of the rollers and the
inner ring in a rolling element bearing. The tribological contact
controlling the operation of the human hip joint is also very similar to
this. Another example of a non-conformal contact occurs when driving on
rainy roads, where the hydrodynamic action of the water separates the tire.
To enable investigations of these types of problems, different theoretical
models were studied; for the selected model, a numerical solution technique
was developed within this project. This model is based on the Reynolds
equation coupled with the film thickness equation. The numerical solution
technique involves a multilevel technique to facilitate the solution
process. Results presented in this thesis, utilizing this approach, study
elementary surface features such as ridges and indentations passing each
other inside the lubricated conjunction.
The Reynolds equation is derived under the assumptions of thin fluid film
and creeping flow, and considers in its most general form shear thinning of
the lubricant. This type of equation describes the hydrodynamic action of
the lubricant flow and may be used when the interfaces consist of either
conformal or non-conformal conjunctions. Examples of applications having
conformal interfaces are thrust- and journal- bearings or the contact
between the eye and a (optical) contact lens. In such types of applications
the load carried by the interface is distributed over a fairly large area
that under certain circumstances helps to prevent mechanical deformation of
the contacting surfaces. Such applications are said to operate in the
hydrodynamic lubrication (HL) regime.
Lubricant compressibility and cavitation are important aspects and have
received some attention. However, the main objective when modeling HL has
been to investigate and develop methods that enable the influence of
surface roughness to be to be studied efficiently.
Homogenization is a rigorous mathematical concept that when applied to a
certain problem may be regarded as an averaging technique as well as it
provides information about the induced effects of local surface roughness.
Homogenization inflicts no restrictions on the surface roughness
representation other than the representative part of the chosen surface
roughness being assumed periodically distributed and of course the
assumptions of thin film flow made through the Reynolds equation. The
homogenization process leads to a two sets of equations one for the local
scale describing surface roughness, scale and one for the global scale
describing application geometry. The unequivocally determined coefficients
of the global problem, which may be regarded as flow factors, are obtained
through the solution of local problems. This makes homogenization an
eminent approach to be used investigating the influence of surface
roughness on hydrodynamic performance.
In the present work, homogenization has been used to derive computationally
feasible forms of problems originating from incompressible and compressible
Reynolds type equations that describe stationary and unstationary flows in
both cartezian and cylindrical co-ordinates. This technique enables
simulations of surface roughness induced effects when considering surface
roughness descriptions originating from measurements. Moreover, the
application of homogenization facilitates the interpretation of results.
Numerical investigations following the homogenization process have been
carried out to verify the applicability of homogenization in hydrodynamic
lubrication. Homogenization has also been shown here to enable efficient
analysis of rough hydrodynamically lubricated problems. Also of note, in
connection to the scientific contribution within tribology, collaboration
with a group in applied mathematics has lead to the development of novel
techniques in that area. These ideas have also been successfully applied,
with some results presented in this thesis.
At start-ups, the contact in a rolling element bearing could be both
starved and drained from lubricant. In this case the hydrodynamic action
becomes negligible in terms of load carrying capacity. The load is carried
exclusively by surface asperities, the tribo film, or both. This is hereby
modeled as the unlubricated frictionless contact between rough surfaces,
i.e. a contact mechanical approach. A variational principle was used in
which the real area of contact and the contact pressure distribution
minimize the total complementary potential energy. The material model is
linear elastic-perfectly plastic and the energy dissipation due to plastic
deformation is accounted for. The numerics of this contact mechanical
approach involve the fast Fourier transformation (FFT) technique in order
to facilitate the solution process. Investigation results of the contact
mechanics of realistic surfaces are presented in this thesis. In this
investigation the variation in the real area of contact, the plasticity
index and some surface roughness parameters due to applied load were
studied.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--06/31--SE / NR 2006:31
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