Non-Newtonian Response of EHL Film Temperature

Author(s):  
M. Kaneta ◽  
H. Nishikawa ◽  
S. Okabayashi ◽  
J. Wang ◽  
P. Yang

The temperature and thickness of oil film in point EHL contacts between a rough stationary surface and a smooth moving surface are measured with infrared and optical interferometry techniques. The ridges and furrows of the roughness are aligned with the parallel direction to that of lubricant entrainment. The experimental results are compared with numerical simulations based on Eyring and Newtonian fluid flow models. Under certain conditions, the average film temperature across the oil film near the central contact region is higher at the furrow position than at the ridge position. It is revealed that this phenomenon is caused by shear thinning behavior of lubricant.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian O. Kottwitz ◽  
Anton A. Popov ◽  
Steffen Abe ◽  
Boris J. P. Kaus

<p>Finding an adequate bridge between direct and continuum modeling approaches has been the fundamental issue of upscaling fluid flow in rock masses. Typically, numerical simulations of direct fluid flow (e.g. Stokes or Lattice-Boltzmann) in fractured or porous media serve as small-scale building blocks for larger-scale continuum flow simulations (e.g. Darcy). For fractured rock masses, the discrete-fracture-network (DFN) modeling approach is often used as an initial step to upscale flow properties by parameterizing the permeability of each fracture with its hydraulic aperture and solving steady-state flow equations within the fracture system. However, numerical simulations of Stokes flow in small fracture networks (FN) indicate that, depending on the orientation of the applied pressure gradient, fluid flow tends to localize at places where fractures intersect. This effect causes discrepancies between direct and equivalent continuum flow modeling approaches, which ought to be taken into account when modeling flow at the network scale.</p><p>In this study, we compare direct flow simulations of small fracture networks to their continuum representation obtained with several techniques in order to find an upscaling approach that takes these intersection effects into account. Direct flow simulations are conducted by solving the Stokes equations in 3D using our open-source finite-difference software LaMEM. Continuum flow simulations are realized with a newly developed parallel finite-element code, which solves fully anisotropic 3D Darcy flow with specific permeability tensors for each voxel. The direct flow simulations serve as benchmarks to optimize the continuum flow models by comparing resulting permeabilities. We tested two different schemes to generate the equivalent continuum representation: </p><p>(1) Fully resolved isotropic permeability discretizations (fracture permeability is obtained from a refined cubic law) where voxel sizes are a fraction of the minimal hydraulic aperture of the FN or</p><p>(2) coarse anisotropic permeability discretizations (permeability tensors are rotated according to fracture orientation) with voxel sizes larger than the minimal hydraulic aperture of the FN.</p><p>We then assess different scenarios to incorporate the intersection effects by adding, averaging and/or multiplying the permeabilities of the intersecting fractures within intersection voxels. Preliminary results for scheme 1 suggest that a simple addition of both intersecting fracture permeabilities delivers the best fit to the results of the direct flow simulations, if the voxel size is about 68% of the minimal hydraulic aperture. Scheme 2 systematically underestimates the direct flow permeabilities by about 26%.</p>


Author(s):  
H Nishikawa ◽  
K Ueda ◽  
M Kaneta ◽  
J Wang ◽  
P Yang

The effects of longitudinal surface roughness on the oil film temperature are studied numerically based on Eyring and Newtonian fluid flow models under point contact rolling and sliding elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) conditions. There is a significant difference in oil film temperature distribution between the Eyring or shear thinning fluid and the Newtonian fluid. In shear thinning fluids, the relationship between the oil film temperature distribution and the roughness around the central contact area becomes out-of-phase, i.e. the temperature of oil film is higher at the valley than at the ridge of asperity. Such a phenomenon occurs easily under short wavelength and low amplitude of roughness, and moderate entrainment velocities depending on the slide-roll ratio.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (4) ◽  
pp. 1381-1411
Author(s):  
Pierre Cordesse ◽  
Alberto Remigi ◽  
Benjamin Duret ◽  
Angelo Murrone ◽  
Thibaut Ménard ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taha Aziz ◽  
F. M. Mahomed

The present review is intended to encompass the applications of symmetry based approaches for solving non-Newtonian fluid flow problems in various physical situations. Works which deal with the fundamental science of non-Newtonian fluids that are analyzed using the Lie group method and conditional symmetries are reviewed. We provide the mathematical modelling, the symmetries deduced, and the solutions obtained for all the models considered. This survey includes, as far as possible, all the articles published until2015. Only papers published by a process of peer review in archival journals are reviewed and are grouped together according to the specific non-Newtonian models under investigation.


Author(s):  
M. Zubair Akbar Qureshi ◽  
Kashif Ali ◽  
Muhammad Farooq Iqbal ◽  
Muhammad Ashraf

Author(s):  
João Pedro Costa Eliziário ◽  
andrevidy honório ◽  
Marcos Lourenço ◽  
Elie Luis Martínez Padilla

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document