contact mechanical
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2021 ◽  
Vol 2137 (1) ◽  
pp. 012043
Author(s):  
LuLing Dai

Abstract The working condition parameters of common contact mechanical seals are experimentally studied by orthogonal experimental design. The effects of working condition parameters on mechanical seal performance are compared by variance and range analysis, and the optimal sealing working condition is put forward. The results show that the spring specific pressure has a great influence on the leakage of mechanical seal, and the leakage decreases rapidly with the increase of spring specific pressure; With the increase of spring specific pressure, the friction power consumption increases. According to the test results, considering the requirements of mechanical seal performance and service life, the optimal spring specific pressure is 0.028 MPa under the condition of medium pressure ps =0.60 MPa and motor speed n =2960 r/min. At this time, the leakage is 6.120 ml/h and the friction power consumption is 0.648 kW.


Coatings ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 1338
Author(s):  
Guangyao Bei ◽  
Chenbo Ma ◽  
Jianjun Sun ◽  
Xingya Ni ◽  
Yafei Ma

The fluid leakage channel found in contact mechanical seals belongs to the microchannel category. Thus, upon further inspection, the influence of surface wettability and other factors neglected in previous studies becomes obvious. The porous leakage model of contact mechanical seals considering the surface wettability presented in this paper was based on the Cassie model and slip theory. The variations of the microchannel slip length and the velocity under various wettability conditions were studied and the relationship between the slip length and the apparent contact angle was established. Moreover, using porous media theory, the theoretical model of the leakage rate in contact mechanical seals considers the surface wettability depending on various parameters. The observed parameters included the surface contact angle, sealing medium pressure, viscosity coefficient, fractal dimension, and maximum pore diameter. The simulation results obtained using the proposed model have shown that the leakage rate increases with the increase of the apparent contact angle. Particularly when the contact pressure is small, the influence of the surface wettability is more significant. Furthermore, the leakage rate results obtained via the proposed model were compared to those of existing models. The comparison confirmed that the proposed model is applicable and that the necessity of considering wettability significantly affects the leakage rate calculation accuracy. The proposed model lays a foundation for further improving the calculation accuracy, making it easier for both the researchers and practitioners to suppress the leakage in contact mechanical seals.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ophelie Leger ◽  
Frederick Garcia ◽  
Mehdi Khafif ◽  
Nathalie Leblanc-Fournier ◽  
Aroune Duclos ◽  
...  

How immune responses are activated and regulated is a central question in immunology. In addition to molecular signaling, recent work has shown that physical forces regulate the immune response of vertebrates by modifying transmembrane protein conformation and cell contact. Mechanical stress and strain produced by forces constitute physical cues perceived by cells instructing gene expression. Whether mechanical cues generated by pathogens during host colonization can trigger adaptive responses in plant cells remains elusive. We found that local and progressive variations of plant cell wall tension caused by fungal pathogen attacks are transmitted to neighboring healthy tissue around the infection site and trigger immunity in distal cells. This thigmoimmunity process requires the reorganization of cortical microtubules and contributes strongly to Arabidopsis disease resistance.


Author(s):  
R. Rothfelder ◽  
L. Lanzl ◽  
J. Selzam ◽  
D. Drummer ◽  
M. Schmidt

AbstractSubject of this work is the contact mechanical properties and flowability of polymer and metal powders when they are dispensed on the surface of a powder bed for use in laser-based powder bed fusion in additive manufacturing. Generating local part properties in metal as well as polymer-based powder bed fusion processes is of high interest, so an approach is made to locally add additives by a vibrational microfeeding system for metal and polymer powders. To realize a controlled powder discharge, the behavior of additives, which are dropped on a surface and on a powder bed is analyzed. Influencing factors for mass flow of the powders will be excitation frequency, excitation amplitude and capillary diameter on the side of experimental setup as well as particle size distribution and physical properties on the material side.


2021 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. 04-09
Author(s):  
Jamaladdin Aslanov Jamaladdin Aslanov

The study examined the diffusion phenomenon caused by compressive forces in tribotechnical nodes adhering to each other under high contact pressure and the mechanism of rupture of surfaces during surface fatigue. As a result, for two metal surfaces, depending on the nature of the touch, the gravitational and repulsive forces generated during the interaction in any environment are determined based on the number of touches and an analytical expression is obtained to calculate them. Keywords: tribotechnical knot, mutual contact, diffusion phenomenon, surface attraction, molecular contact, mechanical contact.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1582
Author(s):  
Emanuel Willert

Fretting wear of axisymmetric contacts is considered within the framework of the Hertz–Mindlin approximation and the Archard law for the linear wear. If the characteristic time scale for the wear is much larger than the duration of a single fretting oscillation, the profile change due to wear during one fretting cycle can be neglected for the contact problem as a zero-order approximation. This allows to give an exact contact solution during each fretting cycle, depending on the current worn profile, and thus for the explicit statement of an ordinary integro-differential equation system for the time-evolution of the fretting profile, which can be easily solved numerically. The proposed method gives the same results as a known, contact mechanically more rigorous simulation procedure that also operates within the framework of the Hertz–Mindlin approximation, but works significantly faster than the latter one. Tangential and torsional fretting wear are considered in detail. A comparison of the numerical prediction for the evolution of the worn profile in partial slip torsional fretting of a rubber ball on abrasive paper shows good agreement with experimental results from the literature.


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