Effect of surface roughness on the lubrication properties of the piston ring and cylinder of an engine, and calculation of lubrication and power loss analysis of piston-ring pack of a S195 diesel engine

1992 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 263-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. L. Gui ◽  
K. Liu
2014 ◽  
Vol 668-669 ◽  
pp. 205-208
Author(s):  
Xiao Ri Liu ◽  
Guo Xiang Li ◽  
Shu Zhan Bai ◽  
Yu Ping Hu

With consideration of asperity contact, the minimum oil film thickness and friction power loss are calculated by simultaneous solution of the dynamics, blow-by and lubrication of piston ring pack. Take the piston ring pack in the first cylinder from the free end of a six-cylinder diesel engine for example, results show that the asperity contact takes place at all of the compression rings and oil ring; the minimum oil film thickness is 1.04μm at the top ring; the total friction loss power is 0.94kW, the top ring accounts for 37.2%, the second ring accounts for 33.0%, the oil ring accounts for 29.8%.


2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 908-921
Author(s):  
Wanyou Li ◽  
Yibin Guo ◽  
Xiqun Lu ◽  
Xuan Ma ◽  
Tao He ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jeffrey Jocsak ◽  
Victor W. Wong ◽  
Tian Tian

This paper presents enhancements to a previously developed mixed-lubrication ring-pack model that has been used extensively in the automotive industry in predicting piston-ring/liner oil film thickness, friction and oil-transport processes along the liner. The previous model considers three lubrication regimes, shear thinning of the lubricant, and the unsteady wetting conditions of the rings at the leading and trailing edges. The model incorporates the effects of surface roughness by using Patir and Cheng’s average flow model and the Greenwood and Tripp statistical asperity contact model, assuming a Gaussian distribution of surface roughness. However, as a result of the methods used to machine a cylinder liner and the wear-in process observed in engines, the cylinder liner finish is highly non-Gaussian. The purpose of this current study is to understand the effects of additional surface parameters other than Gaussian root-mean-square surface roughness on piston ring-pack friction in the context of a natural gas reciprocating engine ring/liner interface. In general, the surface roughness of a cylinder liner is negatively skewed. Applying similar methodology published in the literature, a wide variety of non-Gaussian probability density functions were generated in terms of the skewness of the cylinder liner surface. These probability density functions were implemented into the Greenwood and Tripp asperity contact model, and subsequently into the traditional MIT ring-pack friction model. The effects of surface skewness on flow were approximated using Gaussian flow factors and a simple truncation method. The enhanced model was studied in conjunction with results from an existing ring-pack dynamic model that provided the dynamic twists of the rings relative to the liner and inter-ring pressures. In this manner, a detailed analysis of the effects of engineered cylinder liner finish on reducing friction losses was performed.


Author(s):  
M-T Ma ◽  
E. H. Smith ◽  
I Sherrington

A model of piston-ring pack lubrication and friction which is capable of analysing non-axisymmetric conditions has been developed by the authors. Part 1 of this paper describes how the influences of relative ring locations, oil accumulation and mixed/boundary lubrication are modelled in a ring pack. An attempt has been made to validate the model by comparing its predictions with measurements from Hamilton and Moore's experiments. Results obtained from a computer simulation of a modern automotive ring pack in a circular bore, based on this model, have also been presented and discussed. In this part of the paper, a description of a bore geometry model and an approximate approach for evaluating the ring conformability are presented. In addition, two methods for determining the oil availability in a distorted bore are described. Finally, the results obtained from simulating the operation of a full ring pack in a non-circular bore under a range of conditions are presented and discussed. The results show that bore distortion can considerably reduce the power loss, but will also dramatically increase the net quantity of oil transported into the combustion chamber, when the bore out-of-roundness is excessively large.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 5513-5527
Author(s):  
J. W. Tee ◽  
S. H. Hamdan ◽  
W. W. F. Chong

Fundamental understanding of piston ring-pack lubrication is essential in reducing engine friction. This is because a substantial portion of engine frictional losses come from piston-ring assembly. Hence, this study investigates the tribological impact of different piston ring profiles towards engine in-cylinder friction. Mathematical models are derived from Reynolds equation by using Reynolds’ boundary conditions to generate the contact pressure distribution along the complete piston ring-pack/liner conjunction. The predicted minimum film thickness is then used to predict the friction generated between the piston ring-pack and the engine cylinder liner. The engine in-cylinder friction is predicted using Greenwood and Williamson’s rough surface contact model. The model considers both the boundary friction and the viscous friction components. These mathematical models are integrated to simulate the total engine in-cylinder friction originating from the studied piston ring-pack for a complete engine cycle. The predicted minimum film thickness and frictional properties from the current models are shown to correlate reasonably with the published data. Hence, the proposed mathematical approach prepares a simplistic platform in predicting frictional losses of piston ring-pack/liner conjunction, allowing for an improved fundamental understanding of the parasitic losses in an internal combustion engine.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr Veigend ◽  
Gabriela Necasov ◽  
Peter Raffai ◽  
Vclav Åtek ◽  
Jir Kunovsk

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