scholarly journals Experimental Study on the Dynamic Performance of Water-Lubricated Rubber Bearings with Local Contact

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wu Ouyang ◽  
Xuebing Zhang ◽  
Yong Jin ◽  
Xiaoyang Yuan

Accurate dynamic characteristic coefficients of water-lubricated rubber bearings are necessary to research vibration of ship propulsion system. Due to mixed lubrication state of water-lubricated rubber bearings, normal test rig and identification method are not applicable. This paper establishes a test rig to simulate shaft misalignment and proposes an identification method for water-lubricated rubber bearings, which utilizes rotor unbalanced motion to produce self-excited force rather than artificial excitation. Dynamic performance tests under different conditions are operated. The results show that when rotational speed is less than 700 r/min, even if specific pressure is 0.05 MPa, it is difficult to form complete water film for the rubber bearing which was investigated, and contact friction and collision of the shaft and bearing are frequent. In the mixed lubrication, water film, rubber, and contact jointly determine dynamic characteristics of water-lubricated rubber bearings. The contact condition has a significant effect on the bearing stiffness, and water film friction damping has a significant effect on bearing damping. As for the particular investigated bearing, when rotational speed is in the range of 400~700 r/min and specific pressure is in the range of 0.03~0.07 MPa, bearing stiffness is in the range of 5.6~10.06 N/μm and bearing damping is in the range of 1.25~2.02 Ns/μm.

Author(s):  
Tae Ho Kim ◽  
Moon Sung Park ◽  
Jongsung Lee ◽  
Young Min Kim ◽  
Kyoung-Ku Ha ◽  
...  

Gas foil bearings (GFBs) have clear advantages over oil-lubricated and rolling element bearings, by virtue of low power loss, oil-free operation in compact units, and rotordynamic stability at high speeds. However, because of the inherent low gas viscosity, GFBs have lower load capacity than the other bearings. In particular, accurate measurement of load capacity and dynamic characteristics of gas foil thrust bearings (GFTBs) is utmost important to widening their applications to high performance turbomachinery. In this study, a series of excitation tests were performed on a small oil-free turbomachinery with base excitations in the rotor axial direction to measure the dynamic load characteristics of a pair of six-pad, bump-type GFTBs, which support the thrust collar. An electromagnetic shaker provided dynamic sine sweep loads to the test bench (shaking table), which held rigidly the turbomachinery test rig for increasing excitation frequency from 10 Hz to 200 Hz. The magnitude of the shaker dynamic load, represented as an acceleration measured on the test rig, was increased up to 9 G (gravity). An eddy current sensor installed on the test rig housing measured the axial displacement (or vibrational amplitude) of the rotor thrust collar during the excitation tests. The axial acceleration of the rotor relative to the test rig was calculated using the measured displacement. A single degree-of-freedom base excitation model identified the frequency-dependent dynamic load capacity, stiffness, damping, and loss factor of the test GFTB for increasing shaker dynamic loads and increasing bearing clearances. The test results show that, for a constant shaker force and the test GFTB with a clearance of 155 μm, an increasing excitation frequency increases the dynamic load carried by the test GFTB, i.e., bearing reaction force, until a certain value of the frequency where it jumps down suddenly because of the influence from Duffing’s vibrations of the rotor. The bearing stiffness increases and the damping decreases dramatically as the excitation frequency increases. Generally, the bearing loss factor ranges from 0.5 to 1.5 independent of the frequency. As the shaker force increases, the bearing dynamic load, stiffness, damping, and loss factor increase depending on the excitation frequency. Interestingly, the agreements between the measured GFTB dynamic load versus the thrust runner displacement, the measured GFTB static load versus the structural deflection, and the predicted static load versus the thrust runner displacement are remarkable. Further tests with increasing GFTB clearances of 155, 180, 205, and 225 μm revealed that the vibrational amplitude increases and the jump-down frequency decreases with increasing clearances. The bearing load increases, but the bearing stiffness, damping, and loss factor decrease slightly as the clearance increases. The test results after a modification of the GFTB by rotating one side bearing plate by 30° relative to the other side bearing plate revealed insignificant changes in the dynamic characteristics. The present dynamic performance measurements provide a useful database of GFTBs for use in microturbomachinery.


2018 ◽  
Vol 141 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shivam S. Alakhramsing ◽  
Matthijn B. de Rooij ◽  
Aydar Akchurin ◽  
Dirk J. Schipper ◽  
Mark van Drogen

In this work, a mixed lubrication model, applicable to cam-roller contacts, is presented. The model takes into account non-Newtonian, thermal effects, and variable roller angular velocity. Mixed lubrication is analyzed using the load sharing concept, using measured surface roughness. Using the model, a quasi-static analysis for a heavily loaded cam-roller follower contact is carried out. The results show that when the lubrication conditions in the roller-pin contact are satisfactory, i.e., low friction levels, then the nearly “pure rolling” condition at the cam-roller contact is maintained and lubrication performance is also satisfactory. Moreover, non-Newtonian and thermal effects are then negligible. Furthermore, the influence of roller-pin friction coefficient on the overall tribological behavior of the cam-roller contact is investigated. In this part, a parametric study is carried out in which the friction coefficient in the roller-pin contact is varied from values corresponding to full film lubrication to values corresponding to boundary lubrication. Main findings are that at increasing friction levels in the roller-pin contact, there is a sudden increase in the slide-to-roll ratio (SRR) in the cam-roller contact. The value of the roller-pin friction coefficient at which this sudden increase in SRR is noticed depends on the contact force, the non-Newtonian characteristics, and viscosity–pressure dependence. For roller-pin friction coefficient values higher than this critical value, inclusion of non-Newtonian and thermal effects becomes highly important. Furthermore, after this critical level of roller-pin friction, the lubrication regime rapidly shifts from full film to mixed lubrication. Based on the findings in this work, the importance of ensuring adequate lubrication in the roller-pin contact is highlighted as this appears to be the critical contact in the cam-follower unit.


Author(s):  
YF Shi ◽  
M Li ◽  
GH Zhu ◽  
Y Yu

Dynamic behaviour is significantly important in the design of large rotor systems supported on water-lubricated rubber bearings. In this study, the mathematical model of elastohydrodynamic lubrication of the bearing is established based on the theory of hydrodynamic lubrication after considering the elastic deformation of rubber, and the dynamic characteristics of water-lubricated rubber bearings are analysed under small perturbation conditions according to the load increment method and the finite difference method. Next, the differential equation of rotor systems coupled with the water-lubricated rubber bearing is deduced using Lagrange’s approach, and its critical speeds, stability, and unbalanced responses are analysed in detail. The numerical results show that several parameters, such as the eccentricity, length–diameter ratio, and clearance of bearing and the rotating speed of the rotor, have a great impact on the dynamic performance of water-lubricated rubber bearings, and this influence cannot be ignored, especially in the case of large eccentricity ratios. The dynamic characteristics of rotor systems guided by water-lubricated rubber bearings reveal that the critical speeds are much lower than the ones under the rigid supports because of the elastic deformation, and they also indicate that the rotor system supported on water-lubricated rubber bearings has a weaker stability. In addition, the steady-state responses of the rotor system are analysed when the mass unbalance of the propeller exists, and the effect of the thickness of the rubber liner is also considered.


Author(s):  
Jinwei Chen ◽  
Kuanying Gao ◽  
Maozong Liang ◽  
Huisheng Zhang

The ejectors used for the fuel cell recirculation are more reliable and low cost in maintenance than high-temperature blowers. In this paper, an anode and cathode recirculation scheme, equipped with ejectors, was designed in a solid oxide fuel cell-gas turbine (SOFC-GT) hybrid system. The ejector model, SOFC model, and other component models and the validation were conducted to investigate the performance of the hybrid system with anode and cathode ejectors. The geometric parameters of the ejectors were designed to perform the anode and cathode recirculation loops according to the design conditions of the hybrid system with a blower-based recirculation loop. The cathode ejector geometries are much larger than the anode ejector. In addition, the sensitivity analysis of the primary fluid for the standalone anode and cathode ejectors is investigated. The results show that the ejector can recirculate more secondary fluid by reducing the ejector outlet pressure. Then, the anode and cathode ejectors were integrated into the SOFC-GT hybrid system. A blower gets involved downstream, and the compressor is necessary to avoid high expensive cost of redesigning compressor. The off-design and dynamic performance were characterized after integrating the anode and cathode ejectors into the hybrid system. The dynamic and off-design performances show that the designed ejectors are effectively integrated into the anode and cathode recirculation loops to replace the blower-based recirculation loops. The safety range of relative fuel flow rate is 0.62–1.22 in the fixed rotational speed strategy, and it is 0.53–1.1 in the variable rotational speed strategy. The variable rotational speed strategy can ensure higher system efficiency, which is more than 61% at a part-load condition.


Robotica ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (7) ◽  
pp. 1424-1445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed H. Zaher ◽  
Said M. Megahed

SUMMARYThis paper studies the effect of joint flexibility on the dynamic performance of a serial spatial robot arm of rigid links. Three models are developed in this paper. The first and the third models are developed using the multibody dynamics approach, while the second using the classical robotics approach. A numerical algorithm and an experimental test-rig are developed to test the final model. The links' inertial parameters are estimated numerically. Empirical formulae with assumption models are used to estimate the flexibility coefficients. The simulation results show that the joint damping is a major source of inaccuracies, causing trajectory error without a proper feedback controller.


Author(s):  
Chao Nie ◽  
Xiaojun Yan ◽  
Xia Chen

To investigate the influence of gas feeding position on the performance of radial-inflow hydrostatic gas ultra-short (with a L/D value as 0.1) journal bearing two rotor-bearing system test rigs with two different feeding positions (central feeding and bottom feeding) for the journal bearing were designed. A rotor measurement system with an original rotational speed measurement program is built. Rotation experiments to measure the maximum rotational speed of rotors under different inlet pressure of journal bearing were conducted. It was found that, the rotor supported by the central feeding journal bearing worked better, and achieved a maximum rotational speed of 40000 rpm, (83.74m/s for the tip speed). While the test rig with bottom feeding journal bearing could not function well. To verify the reasons behind the failure mentioned above, the flow condition in the journal clearance and the rotor bottom clearance was analyzed by the CFD simulation. It shows that most of the journal bearing gas “leaks” into the rotor bottom clearance in the bottom feeding bearing test rig, disarranging the axial stability of the rotor and the normal functioning of the thrust bearings. In conclusion, the central feeding radial-inflow journal bearing is better than the bottom feeding one, for the better operability and higher maximum speed. And an ideal feeding position is supposed to make the journal bearing does not influence the axial stability of the rotor and the functioning of the thrust bearings.


Author(s):  
Wenyuan Qin ◽  
Hui Qin ◽  
Hongbo Zheng ◽  
Zhiyi Zhang

The propulsion shafting system of ships is usually supported, in part, by water-lubricated rubber bearings, which often work at mixed or boundary lubrication state under heavy-load and low-speed conditions, resulting in strong friction on the bearing–shaft interface and even abnormal vibration in the overall system. In addition, bearing misalignment can further affect the distribution of friction and consequently change the lateral and torsional vibration characteristics of the shafting system. In this work, the rubber bearing was simplified into parallel-distributed springs and the water film was neglected. The dynamic model of the propulsion shafting system was built with the finite element method and reduced by mode truncation. The coupled effect of bearing misalignment and friction was subsequently analyzed with this reduced model and the fourth-order Runge–Kutta method. Finally, lateral and torsional vibration characteristics of the overall system under different bearing misalignment were obtained, which can be used in the identification or diagnosis of abnormal vibration induced by friction.


2013 ◽  
Vol 328 ◽  
pp. 536-540 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai Yan Wang ◽  
Xu Da Qin

Helical milling is a new holes processing technology, in which the special tool moves to the work piece with a helical path. Helical milling spindle unit is designed based on the helical milling machining principle. The dynamic performance of the unit has much effect on the workpiece surface quality. According to the whole transfer matrix method, the first four order critical speeds are obtained, and the effect of bearing span and stiffness on the critical speed is systematically studied. The result shows that the first order critical speed increases with the increase of bearing span and bearing stiffness.


2013 ◽  
Vol 365-366 ◽  
pp. 304-308
Author(s):  
Lei Wang

An analysis is conducted and solutions are provided for the dynamic performance of high speed hybrid thrust bearing. By adopting bulk flow theory, the turbulent Reynolds equation is solved numerically with the different orifice diameter and supply pressure. The results show that increasing supply pressure can significantly improve the bearing stiffness and damping, while the orifice diameters make a different effect on the bearing stiffness and damping.


Author(s):  
M. E. F. Kasarda ◽  
P. E. Allaire ◽  
R. R. Humphris ◽  
L. E. Barrett

Many rotating machines such as compressors, turbines and pumps have long thin shafts with resulting vibration problems. They would benefit from additional damping near the center of the shaft. Magnetic dampers have the potential to be employed in these machines because they can operate in the working fluid environment unlike conventional bearings. This paper describes an experimental test rig which was set up with a long thin shaft and several masses to represent a flexible shaft machine. An active magnetic damper was placed in three locations: near the midspan, near one end disk, and close to the bearing. With typical control parameter settings, the midspan location reduced the first mode vibration 82%, the disk location reduced it 75% and the bearing location attained a 74% reduction. Magnetic damper stiffness and damping values used to obtain these reductions were only a few percent of the bearing stiffness and damping values. A theoretical model of both the rotor and the damper was developed and compared to the measured results. The agreement was good.


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