scholarly journals Effects of Surface Treatment on the Bending Fatigue Strength of Carburized Spur Gear.

1994 ◽  
Vol 60 (572) ◽  
pp. 1391-1396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sung-Ki Lyu ◽  
Katsumi Inoue ◽  
Masana Kato ◽  
Masazumi Onisi ◽  
Kenji Shimoda
Author(s):  
Masashi Yamanaka ◽  
Shinji Miwa ◽  
Katsumi Inoue ◽  
Yoshiki Kawasaki

This paper deals with the evaluation of influence of the manufacturing methods precision forging and conventional hobbing on the bending fatigue strength of carburized gears. The forging has advantages in productivity and strength. The forged gear has a continuous directed fiber flow which runs along the gear profile. To clarify the effect of strength enhancement, a bending fatigue test is performed for the forged and the hobbed gears. The material of test gears is SCr420H in the JIS and all gears are carburized. The electrohydraulic servo-controlled fatigue tester is used in the constant stress-amplitude fatigue test. The strength is expressed by the fillet stress level, which is calculated by FEM. The obtained strengths of forged and hobbed gear are 1613 MPa and 1490 MPa, respectively. The strength of forged gear is increased 8% in comparison with that of the hobbed gear. The surface hardness is higher and the surface roughness is smaller in the forged gear, however, the residual stress is approximately same. The effect of improvement of the roughness by forging on the strength is small in 1%, and the main reason of the improvement of fatigue strength is considered as the continuous fiber flow.


Author(s):  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Jianhua Lv ◽  
Rizwanulhaque Syed ◽  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Yang Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract An experimental evaluation of bending fatigue strength for austempered ductile iron (ADI) spur gears have been performed using Zwick fatigue tester. The gear material was manufactured by vertically continuous casting, in which the radius of the graphite grains is smaller. The Stress-Number of Cycles curve (S-N curve) for the bending fatigue strength of the ADI spur gears are manufactured without any specific surface treatments, and have been obtained by post-processing software. It was observed that when the reliability was 50%, the fatigue limit was 304.89 MPa. It has provided a reliable basis to rate the reliability design of the small gearboxes in automation later.


Author(s):  
Kouitsu Miyachika ◽  
Wei-Dong Xue ◽  
Takao Koide ◽  
Hidefumi Mada ◽  
Kengo Nojima ◽  
...  

This paper presents a study on effects of carburized parts on residual stress and bending fatigue strength of case-carburized thin-rimmed spur gears with asymmetric web arrangement. A heat conduction analysis and an elastic-plastic stress analysis for the case-carburizing process of thin-rimmed spur gears with asymmetric web arrangement were carried out by the three-dimensional finite-element method (3D-FEM), and then residual stresses were obtained. Effects of the case depth, the carburized part and the rim thickness on the residual stress of case-carburized thin-rimmed spur gears were determined. Bending fatigue tests were carried out for case-carburized thin-rimmed spur gears with asymmetric web arrangement, and S-N curves and bending fatigue limit loads were obtained. Effects of the case-depth, the carburized part and the rim thickness on the bending fatigue strength of the case-carburized thin-rimmed spur gear with asymmetric web arrangement were determined.


Author(s):  
D. Fuchs ◽  
S. Schurer ◽  
T. Tobie ◽  
K. Stahl

AbstractDemands on modern gearboxes are constantly increasing, for example to comply with lightweight design goals or new CO2 thresholds. Normally, to increase performance requires making gearboxes and powertrains more robust. However, this increases the weight of a standard gearbox. The two trends therefore seem contradictory. To satisfy both of these goals, gears in gearboxes can be shot-peened to introduce high compressive residual stresses and improve their bending fatigue strength. To determine a gear’s tooth root bending fatigue strength, experiments are conducted up to a defined number of load cycles in the high cycle fatigue range. However, investigations of shot-peened gears have revealed tooth root fracture damage initiated at non-metallic inclusions in and above the very high cycle fatigue range. This means that a further reduction in bending load carrying capacity has to be expected at higher load cycles, something which is not covered under current standard testing conditions. The question is whether there is a significant decrease in the bending load carrying capacity and, also, if pulsating tests conducted at higher load cycles—or even tests on the FZG back-to-back test rig—are necessary to determine a proper endurance fatigue limit for shot-peened gears. This paper examines these questions.


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