Theoretical and experimental studies of the oil film in lubricated point contact

A technique using Newton’s rings for mapping the oil film of lubricated point contacts is described. A theoretical value for the film thickness of such contacts in elastohydrodynamic lubrication is derived. The experimental results give the exit constriction predicted by previous theory but never shown in detail. The comparison of theoretical and experimental oil film thicknesses, which is satisfactorily accurate, gives strong evidence for a viscous surface layer some 1000Å thick. This film agrees with the known ‘lubricating power’ of the various oils tested.

Author(s):  
Eduardo de la Guerra Ochoa ◽  
Javier Echávarri Otero ◽  
Enrique Chacón Tanarro ◽  
Benito del Río López

This article presents a thermal resistances-based approach for solving the thermal-elastohydrodynamic lubrication problem in point contact, taking the lubricant rheology into account. The friction coefficient in the contact is estimated, along with the distribution of both film thickness and temperature. A commercial tribometer is used in order to measure the friction coefficient at a ball-on-disc point contact lubricated with a polyalphaolefin base. These data and other experimental results available in the bibliography are compared to those obtained by using the proposed methodology, and thermal effects are analysed. The new approach shows good accuracy for predicting the friction coefficient and requires less computational cost than full thermal-elastohydrodynamic simulations.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Abd Alsamieh

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to study the behavior of a single ridge passing through elastohydrodynamic lubrication of point contacts problem for different ridge shapes and sizes, including flat-top, triangular and cosine wave pattern to get an optimal ridge profile. Design/methodology/approach The time-dependent Reynolds’ equation is solved using Newton–Raphson technique. Several shapes of surface feature are simulated and the film thickness and pressure distribution are obtained at every time step by simultaneous solution of the Reynolds’ equation and film thickness equation, including elastic deformation. Film thickness and pressure distribution are chosen to be the criteria in the comparisons. Findings The geometrical characteristics of the ridge play an important role in the formation of lubricant film thickness profile and the pressure distribution through the contact zone. To minimize wear, friction and fatigue life, an optimal ridge profile should have smooth shape with small ridge size. Obtained results are compared with other published numerical results and show a good agreement. Originality/value The study evaluates the performance of different surface features of a single ridge with different shapes and sizes passing through elastohydrodynamic of point contact problem in relation to film thickness and pressure profile.


2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilya I. Kudish

Heavily loaded point elastohydrodynamically lubricated (EHL) contacts involved in steady purely transitional, skewed transitional, and transitional with spinning motions are considered. It is shown that in the central parts of the inlet and exit zones of such heavily loaded point EHL contacts the asymptotic equations governing the EHL problem along the lubricant flow streamlines for the above types of contact motions can be reduced to two sets of asymptotic equations: one in the inlet and one in the exit zones. The latter sets of equations are identical to the asymptotic equations describing lubrication process in the inlet and exit zones of the corresponding heavily loaded line EHL contact (Kudish, I. I., 2013, Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication for Line and Point Contacts: Asymptotic and Numerical Approaches, Chapman and Hall/CRC). For each specific motion of a point contact, a separate set of formulas for the lubrication film thickness is obtained. For different types of contact motions, these film thickness formulas differ significantly (Kudish, I. I., 2013, Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication for Line and Point Contacts: Asymptotic and Numerical Approaches, Chapman and Hall/CRC). For heavily loaded contacts, the discovered relationship between point and line EHL problems allows to apply to point contacts most of the results obtained for line contacts (Kudish, I. I., 2013, Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication for Line and Point Contacts: Asymptotic and Numerical Approaches, Chapman and Hall/CRC; Kudish, I. I., and Covitch, M. J., 2010, Modeling and Analytical Methods in Tribology, Chapman and Hall/CRC).


1982 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 173-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Mostofi ◽  
R. Gohar

In this paper, a general numerical solution to the elastohydrodynamic point contact problem is presented for moderate loads and material parameters. Isobars, contours and regression formulae describe how pressure and oil film thickness vary with geometry, material properties, load, and squeeze velocity, when the rolling velocity vector is at various angles to the static contact ellipse long axis. In addition, the EHL behaviour under spin is examined. The theoretical predictions of film thickness compare favourably with other numerical solutions to the point contact problem, as well as with experimental results which use the optical interferometry method to find film thickness and


Author(s):  
R J Chittenden ◽  
D Dowson ◽  
C M Taylor

The existence of a coherent film of lubricant between highly loaded machine elements has been recognized for many years. Over this period of time measurements of film thickness have gone hand in hand with theoretical analyses in the field now known as elastohydrodynamic lubrication. The experimental techniques of capacitance, electrical resistance and X-ray measurement have been supplemented by the use of optical interferometry while the analytical expressions obtained with the use of elegant simplifications have been superseded by those developed from extensive and comprehensive computational procedures. These developments in experimental techniques have yielded a substantial number of measurements of both minimum and central film thickness. Likewise, the advent of the digital computer has allowed the derivation of a large number of solutions to the problem of elastohydrodynamic lubrication of concentrated contacts. All these results, covering a wide range of geometrical conditions, are to be found in the literature, yet little attempt appears to have been made to assemble a representative set of experimental data to permit a detailed evaluation of the theoretical formulae for elliptical contacts. The second part of this paper therefore considers the correlation between a number of experimental studies covering a wide range of operating conditions and geometries, and the predictions of recent elastohydrodynamic theory. Some of the important aspects of each set of experimental results are then considered and examples are provided which illustrate the following points: 1. Good estimates of lubricant film thickness may be obtained from the theoretical expressions recently derived, even when the dimensionless parameters involved are outside the ranges considered in the derivation of the formulae. 2. The discrepancies which exist between theoretical predictions and some of the measured film thicknesses are nevertheless quite large, even when the dimensionless parameters are within their usual limits. On the whole there is good agreement between experiment and theory, while the general trend of the results indicates that theoretical predictions may underestimate the minimum film thickness by about 10 per cent and the central film thickness by about 25 per cent. This measure of agreement is quite remarkable when the extreme difficulty of interpreting the magnitudes of effective and very thin mean film thicknesses between machined components in various forms of experimental equipment is considered.


1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 464-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Turchina ◽  
D. M. Sanborn ◽  
W. O. Winer

Techniques using the infrared radiation emitted by a sliding EHD point contact to measure oil film and surface temperature are discussed. Temperature distributions in the EHD contact are presented for a naphthenic mineral oil at 1.04 × 109 N/m2 (150,000 psi) Hertz pressure and several sliding velocities. Film temperatures as high as 360 C are reported at locations near the points of minimum film thickness in the contact side lobes.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 703-711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyung Hoon Kim ◽  
Farshid Sadeghi

A numerical solution to the problem of isothermal non-Newtonian elastohydrodynamic lubrication of rolling/sliding point contacts has been obtained. The multigrid technique is used to solve the simultaneous system of two-dimensional modified Reynolds and elasticity equations. The effects of various loads, speeds, and slide to roll ratios on the pressure distribution, film thickness, and friction force have been investigated. Results for the dimensionless load W = 4.6 × 10−6 and 1.1 × 10−6, and the dimensionless velocity U = 3 × 10−10 and 3 × 10−11 are presented. The results indicate that slide to roll ratio has negligible effect on the minimum film thickness, however, it significantly reduces the pressure spike.


Author(s):  
B K Karthikeyan ◽  
M Teodorescu ◽  
H Rahnejat ◽  
S J Rothberg

Isothermal and thermoelastohydrodynamic lubrication (TEHL) analyses of grease lubricated bearings are presented. A grease plug flow is formed in the conjunction that, with no shear at the boundaries with the solid surfaces, adheres to them in the region of high pressures under isothermal conditions. The elastohydrodynamic lubrication grease pressure distribution conforms fairly closely to that of its base oil alone, with the exception of inlet trail and pressure spike regions. The dependency of film thickness on speed (rolling viscosity) and load parameters for the base oil agrees with previously reported findings of the research community. For grease there are subtle differences with the base oil film thickness load and speed dependencies. However, it is clear that extrapolated oil film thickness formulae for oils can be used reasonably for the prediction of grease films, at least as a first approximation. The results presented agree well with optical interferometric measurements reported in the literature for grease-lubricated contacts at low temperatures and low surface velocities. TEHL analysis shows breakdown of the plug flow and significant reduction in film thickness, which can lead to changes in the regime of lubrication to mixed or boundary conditions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Wang ◽  
C. H. Venner ◽  
A. A. Lubrecht

The effect of single-sided and double-sided harmonic surface waviness on the film thickness, pressure, and temperature oscillations in an elastohydrodynamically lubricated eccentric-tappet pair has been investigated in relation to the eccentricity and the waviness wavelength. The results show that, during one working cycle, the waviness causes significant fluctuations of the oil film, pressure, and temperature, as well as a reduction in minimum film thickness. Smaller wavelength causes more dramatic variations in oil film. The fluctuations of the pressure, film thickness, temperature, and traction coefficient caused by double-sided waviness are nearly the same compared with the single-sided waviness, but the variations are less intense.


Author(s):  
Fadi Ali ◽  
Ivan Křupka ◽  
Martin Hartl

This study presents experimental results on the effect of out-of-contact lubricant channeling on the tribological performance of nonconformal contacts under starved lubrication. Channeling of lubricant was carried out by adding a slider with a limited slot for scraping the displaced lubricant on one of mating surfaces (ball). Thus, the scraped lubricant is forced to flow back into the depleted track through the limited slot resulting in robust replenishment. The measurements have been conducted using optical tribometer (ball-on-disc) equipped with a digital camera and torque sensor. The effect of lubricant channeling was compared to the original contact condition by means of measuring friction and film thickness. The results show that the out-of-contact lubricant channeling leads to a significant enhancement of film thickness and friction reduction under starved conditions. Indeed, the starved elastohydrodynamic lubrication contacts transformed to the fully flooded regime after introducing the flow reconditioning. Moreover, the film thickness decay over time, which is common with starved elastohydrodynamic lubrication contacts, has not been observed in the case of lubricant channeling. However, the beneficial effect of lubricant channeling diminishes as the original contact condition tends to the fully flooded regime. The results of this study can be easily implemented in practical applications such as radial and thrust rolling-element bearings.


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