Diagnosis of Rolling-Element Bearings Failure by Localized Electrical Current Between Track Surfaces of Races and Rolling-Elements

2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 468-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Har Prashad

The diagnosis and cause analysis of rolling-element bearing failure have been well studied and established in literature. Failure of bearings due to unforeseen causes were reported as: puncturing of bearings insulation; grease deterioration; grease pipe contacting the motor base frame; unshielded instrumentation cable; the bearing operating under the influence of magnetic flux, etc. These causes lead to the passage of electric current through the bearings of motors and alternators and deteriorate them in due course. But, bearing failure due to localized electrical current between track surfaces of races and rolling-elements has not been hitherto diagnosed and analyzed. This paper reports the cause of generation of localized current in presence of shaft voltage. Also, it brings out the developed theoretical model to determine the value of localized current density depending on dimensional parameters, shaft voltage, contact resistance, frequency of rotation of shaft and rolling-elements of a bearing. Furthermore, failure caused by flow of localized current has been experimentally investigated.

2013 ◽  
Vol 569-570 ◽  
pp. 497-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
An Bo Ming ◽  
Zhao Ye Qin ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Fu Lei Chu

Spalling of the races or rolling elements is one of the most common faults in rolling element bearings. Exact estimation of the spall size is helpful to the life prediction for rolling element bearings. In this paper, the dual-impulsive phenomenon in the response of a spalled rolling element bearing is investigated experimentally, where the acoustic emission signals are utilized. A new method is proposed to estimate the spall size by extracting the envelope of harmonics of the ball passing frequency on the outer race from the squared envelope spectrum. Compared with the cepstrum analysis, the proposed procedure shows more powerful anti-noise ability in the fault size evaluation.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 984-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Liew ◽  
N. Feng ◽  
E. J. Hahn

Nonlinearity effects in rolling element bearings arise from Hertzian contact force deformation relationships, clearance between rolling elements and races, and the bearing-to-housing clearance. Assuming zero bearing-to-housing clearance, a simplified earlier analysis showed that rotor bearing systems (RBSs) with deep groove ball bearings can give rise to chaotic motion and jump. This paper extends the bearing model to include rolling element centrifugal load, angular contacts and axial dynamics; and illustrates their effects in a rigidly supported rigid RBS and a flexibly supported flexible RBS, the latter modeling an existing test rig. Results are presented on the effect of bearing preload on the unbalance response up to a speed of 18,000 rpm.


2005 ◽  
Vol 293-294 ◽  
pp. 347-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guo Bi ◽  
Jin Chen ◽  
Jun He ◽  
Fuchang Zhou ◽  
Gui Cai Zhang

Minor and random slip between rolling elements and races in rolling element bearings makes vibration signals have periodically time-varying ensemble statistics, which is known as cyclostationarity. Two second-order cyclostationary methods, the spectral correlation density (SCD) and the degree of cyclostationarity (DCS), are talked about in this paper based on a statistical model of rolling element bearings. The SCD provides redundant information in bi-frequency plane and cyclic frequency domain embodies the majority of it, which is a series of non-zero discrete cyclic frequencies completely reflecting the fault characters of rolling element bearings. The DCS has virtues of less computation and clearer representation, at the same time keeps the same characters with SCD in cyclic frequency domain. And the DCS is also proved to be resistant to the additive and multiplicative stationary noise. Simulation and experiential results from three rolling element bearing faults: outer race defect, inner race defect and rolling element defect, indicate practicability of the DCS analysis in rolling element bearing condition monitoring and fault diagnosis.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakesh Sehgal ◽  
O. P. Gandhi ◽  
S. Angra

Abstract A procedure based on digraph modeling and matrix approach is suggested for failure mode analysis of rolling element bearings. A Bearing Failure Mode Digraph (BFMDj for a failure mode of the rolling element bearing is defined, which considers contributing cause events and their interrelations. The digraph is analyzed using connection and reachability matrices. A Bearing Failure Mode Connection Matrix (BFMCM) is obtained for the Bearing Failure Mode Digraph and a Bearing Failure Mode Reachability Matrix (BFMRM) is derived from it, which helps in identifying the stage relationship among various cause events, and evaluates the importance of the cause events for the failure mode. It therefore provides directions for appropriate action for minimization of the failure mode thus leading to improvement in reliability of the rolling element bearing. The methodology is developed considering the failure mode - bearing seizure and is illustrated by considering the failure mode - excessive noise.


Author(s):  
N. S. Feng ◽  
E. J. Hahn

Non-linearity effects in rolling element bearings arise from two sources, viz. the Hertzian force deformation relationship and the presence of clearance between the rolling elements and the bearing races. Assuming that centrifugal effects may be neglected and that the presence of axial preload is appropriately reflected in a corresponding change in the radial clearance, this paper analyses a simple test rig to illustrate that non-linear phenomena such as synchronous multistable and nonsynchronous motions are possible in simple rigid and flexible rotor systems subjected to unbalance excitation. The equations of motion of the rotor bearing system were solved by transient analysis using fourth order Runge Kutta. Of particular interest is the effect of clearance, governed in practice by bearing specification and the amount of preload, on the vibration behaviour of rotors supported by ball bearings and on the bearing load. It is shown that in the presence of positive clearance, there exists an unbalance excitation range during which the bearing is momentarily not transmitting force owing to contact loss, resulting in rolling element raceway impact with potentially relatively high bearing forces; and indicating that for long bearing life, operation with positive clearance should be avoided in the presence of such unbalance loading. Once the unbalance excitation is high enough to avoid such contact loss, it is the bearings with zero or negative clearance which produce maximum bearing forces.


1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Harker ◽  
J. L. Sandy

Rolling element bearings require distinctly different techniques for monitoring and diagnostics from those used for fluid-film type bearings. A description of these techniques and the instrumentation used to acquire the necessary data is provided for comparison. Also included are some case studies to illustrate how these techniques are applied.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.K. Upadhyay ◽  
L.A. Kumaraswamidhas ◽  
Md.Sikandar Azam

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weigang Wen ◽  
Zhaoyan Fan ◽  
Donald Karg ◽  
Weidong Cheng

Nonlinear characteristics are ubiquitous in the vibration signals produced by rolling element bearings. Fractal dimensions are effective tools to illustrate nonlinearity. This paper proposes a new approach based on Multiscale General Fractal Dimensions (MGFDs) to realize fault diagnosis of rolling element bearings, which are robust to the effects of variation in operating conditions. The vibration signals of bearing are analyzed to extract the general fractal dimensions in multiscales, which are in turn utilized to construct a feature space to identify fault pattern. Finally, bearing faults are revealed by pattern recognition. Case studies are carried out to evaluate the validity and accuracy of the approach. It is verified that this approach is effective for fault diagnosis of rolling element bearings under various operating conditions via experiment and data analysis.


Author(s):  
A. Liew ◽  
N. S. Feng ◽  
E. J. Hahn

Non-linearity effects in rolling element bearings may arise from the Hertzian contact force deformation relationship, the presence of clearance between the rolling elements and the bearing races, and the bearing to housing clearance. Assuming zero bearing to housing clearance and ignoring rolling element centrifugal load effects, it has been shown in earlier work that Rotor Bearing Systems (RBSs) with deep groove ball bearings can give rise to non-linear behavior such as chaotic motion and jump. This paper extends the bearing model to include rolling element centrifugal load, angular contacts and axial dynamics. The effect of more sophisticated bearing models is illustrated in both a rigidly supported rigid RBS and a flexibly supported flexible RBS, the latter being a model of a test rig designed to simulate an aircraft mounted accessory drive unit. Results are presented on the effect of bearing preload on the unbalance response up to a speed of 18,000 rpm.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 87-90
Author(s):  
Mohsin H. Albdery ◽  
Istvan Szabo

Any single machine rotary component in the process could result in downtime costs. It is necessary to monitor the overall machine health while it is in use. Bearing failure is one of the primary causes of machine breakdown in industry at high and low speeds. A vibration signature evaluation has historically determined misalignments in shafting systems. These misalignments are also responsible for the bearing increase in temperature. The purpose of this work is to undertake a comparative study to obtain the reliability of the effect of the amount of misalignment on bearing by using thermography measurement. An experimental study was performed in this paper to indicate the existence of machine misalignment at an early stage by measuring the bearing temperature using a thermal imaging camera. The effects of load, velocity, and misalignment on the bearings and their temperature increase have been investigated. The test bench's rolling-element bearing is an NTN UCP213-208 pillow block bearing. It has been observed that by tracking the change of temperature in bearings could lead to misalignment detection and the effect of the amount of misalignment on it.


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