Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication of Elliptical Contacts for Materials of Low Elastic Modulus I—Fully Flooded Conjunction

1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 236-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard J. Hamrock ◽  
Duncan Dowson

Our earlier studies of elastohydrodynamic lubrication of conjunctions of elliptical form are applied to the particular and interesting situation exhibited by materials of low elastic modulus. By modifying the procedures we outlined in an earlier publication, the influence of the ellipticity parameter k and the dimensionless speed U, load W, and material G parameters on minimum film thickness for these materials has been investigated. The ellipticity parameter was varied from 1 (a ball-on-plate configuration) to 12 (a configuration approaching a line contact). The dimensionless speed and load parameters were varied by 1 order of magnitude. Seventeen different cases were used to generate the following minimum- and central-film-thickness relations: H˜min=7.43(1−0.85e−0.31k)U0.65W−0.21H˜c=7.32(1−0.72e−0.28k)U0.64W−0.22 Contour plots are presented that illustrate in detail the pressure distribution and film thickness in the conjunction.

1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 264-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Hamrock ◽  
D. Dowson

Utilizing the theory developed by the authors in an earlier publication, the influence of the ellipticity parameter, the dimensionless speed, load, and material parameters on minimum film thickness was investigated. The ellipticity parameter was varied from one (a ball on a plate configuration) to eight (a configuration approaching a line contact). The dimensionless speed parameter was varied over a range of nearly two orders of magnitude. The dimensionless load parameter was varied over a range of one order of magnitude. Conditions corresponding to the use of solid materials of bronze, steel, and silicon nitride and lubricants of paraffinic and naphthenic mineral oils were considered in obtaining the exponent in the dimensionless material parameter. Thirty-four different cases were used in obtaining the minimum film thickness formula given below as H¯min=3.63U0.68G0.49W−0.073(1−e−0.68k) A simplified expression for the ellipticity parameter was found where k=1.03RyRx0.64 Contour plots were also shown which indicate in detail the pressure spike and two side lobes in which the minimum film thickness occurs. These theoretical solutions of film thickness have all the essential features of the previously reported experimental observations based upon optical interferometry.


1979 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Hamrock ◽  
D. Dowson

By using the theory and numerical procedure developed by the authors in earlier publications, the influence of lubricant starvation upon minimum film thickness in starved elliptical elastohydrodynamic conjunctions for low-elastic-modulus materials has been investigated. Lubricant starvation was studied simply by moving the inlet boundary closer to the center of the conjunction. The results show that the location of the dimensionless inlet boundary m* between the fully flooded and starved conditions can be expressed simply as m* = 1 + 1.07 [(Rx/b)2Hmin,F]0.16, where Rx is the effective radius of curvature in the rolling direction, b is the semiminor axis of the contact ellipse, and Hmin,F is the dimensionless mimimum film thickness for the fully flooded condition. That is, for a dimension-less inlet distance m less than m*, starvation occurs; and for m ≥ m*, a fully flooded condition exists. Furthermore, it has been possible to express the minimum film thickness for a starved condition as Hmin,S = Hmin,F [(m − 1)/(m* − 1)]0.22. Contour plots of the pressure and film thickness in and around the contact are presented for both the fully flooded and starved lubrication conditions. It is evident from the contour plots that the inlet pressure contours become less circular and that the film thickness decreases substantially as the severity of starvation increases. The results presented in this report, when combined with the findings previously reported, enable the essential features of starved, elliptical, elastohydrodynamic conjunctions for materials of low elastic modulus to be ascertained.


Author(s):  
M Masjedi ◽  
MM Khonsari

Mixed elastohydrodynamic lubrication of materials with low elastic modulus (soft materials) is investigated. Expressions for prediction of film thickness and the asperity load ratio in soft line-contact elastohydrodynamic lubrication are presented. The traction behavior of soft contact in mixed elastohydrodynamic lubrication regime is also studied in terms of the Stribeck curves.


2013 ◽  
Vol 281 ◽  
pp. 329-334
Author(s):  
Jun He ◽  
Huang Ping ◽  
Qian Qian Yang

In the present paper, a new method for measuring elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) pressure in line contact is proposed, which is based on the photoelastic technique. The pressure distribution of EHL film and the inner stresses in the friction pairs are fundamental issues to carry out EHL research. The film thickness, pressure and temperature have been successfully obtained with solving the basic equations such as Reynolds equation and energy equation simultaneously or separately, with numerical model of EHL problem. The film thickness can be also measured with the optical interference technique. However, the pressure measurement is still a problem which has not been well solved yet, so as the inner stresses inside the friction pairs. With the experimental mechanics, the photoelastic technique is a possible method to be used for measuring the pressure distribution of EHL film and inner friction pair in the line contact. Therefore, A flat plastic disk and a steel roller compose the frictional pairs of the photoelastic pressure measuring rig with combining the monochromatic LED light source, polarizer CCD camera and stereomicroscope to form the whole pressure measuring system of the line contact EHL. The experimental results with the rig display the typical features of EHL pressure. This shows that the method is feasible to be used for measuring the pressure of EHL film and the inner stresses of the friction pairs in the line contact.


2020 ◽  
Vol 87 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Su ◽  
Hong-Xia Song ◽  
Liao-Liang Ke

Abstract Using surface elasticity theory, this article first analyzes the surface effect on the elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) line contact between an elastic half-plane and a rigid cylindrical punch. In this theory, the surface effect is characterized with two parameters: surface elastic modulus and residual surface stress. The density and viscosity of the lubricant, considered as Newtonian fluid, vary with the fluid pressure. A numerical iterative method is proposed to simultaneously deal with the flow rheology equation, Reynolds equation, load balance equation, and film thickness equation. Then, the fluid pressure and film thickness are numerically determined at the lubricant contact region. Influences of surface elastic modulus, residual surface stress, punch radius, resultant normal load, and entraining velocity on the lubricant film thickness and fluid pressure are discussed. It is found that the surface effect has remarkable influences on the micro-/nano-scale EHL contact of elastic materials.


Author(s):  
C. J. Hooke ◽  
P Huang

The paper discusses the influence of viscoelasticity in elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL). It is shown that viscoelastic effects, particularly in soft materials such as rubber and polymers, may significantly affect the lubrication process. The variations of the pressure and film thickness with viscoelasticity are discussed, as is the internal energy loss in the material. Two effects are present. The first, controlled by the Deborah number based on the Hertz contact width, determines the width of the contact, the overall pressure distribution and the energy loss. The second, controlled by the Deborah number based on the entrainment length, largely determines the thickness of the entrained film and the minimum film thickness.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Masjedi ◽  
M. M. Khonsari

Three formulas are derived for predicting the central and the minimum film thickness as well as the asperity load ratio in line-contact EHL with provision for surface roughness. These expressions are based on the simultaneous solution to the modified Reynolds equation and surface deformation with consideration of elastic, plastic and elasto-plastic deformation of the surface asperities. The formulas cover a wide range of input and they are of the form f(W, U, G, σ¯, V), where the parameters represented are dimensionless load, speed, material, surface roughness and hardness, respectively.


1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Hamrock ◽  
D. Dowson

A numerical solution of the isothermal elastohydrodynamic problem for point contacts has been presented which reproduces all the essential features of the previously reported experimental observations based upon optical interferometry. In particular, the two “side lobes” in which minimum film thickness regions occur are shown to emerge in the theoretical solutions. The influence of the ellipticity parameter upon solutions to the point contact problem has been explored in the present paper. The ellipticity parameter (k) was varied from one (a ball on a plate) to eight (a configuration approaching line contact), and it has been shown that the minimum film thicknesses can be related to the well known line contact solutions by remarkably simple expressions involving either (k) or the effective radius of curvature ratio (Ry/Rx).


Author(s):  
V. D’Agostino ◽  
V. Petrone ◽  
A. Senatore

A numerical solution of elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) contact between two rough surface cylinders is presented. In the theoretical approach the free-volume viscosity model is used to describe the piezo-viscous behavior of the lubricant in a Newtonian Elastohydrodynamic line contact [1,2]. Random rough surfaces with Gaussian and exponential statistics have been generated using a method outlined by Garcia and Stoll [3], where an uncorrelated distribution of surface points using a random number generator is convolved with a Gaussian filter to achieve correlation. This convolution is most efficiently performed using the discrete Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithm, which in MATLAB is based on the FFTW library [4]. The maximum pressure and average film thickness are studied at different values of RMS, skewness, kurtosis, autocorrelation function and correlation length. Numerical examples show that skewness and kurtosis have a great effect on the parameters of EHD lubrication. Surface roughness, indeed, tends to reduce the minimum film thickness and it produces pressure fluctuations inside the conjunction which tend to increase the maximum stress. In this way the dynamic stress increases and tends to reduce the fatigue life of the components. It can be seen that the pressures developed in the fluid film in the case of rough surfaces fluctuate with the same frequency of the surface roughness. These pressure ripples correspond to the asperity peaks. This indicates that surface roughness causes very high local contact pressures which may lead to local thinning of the film. A significant reduction has been also observed in the minimum film thickness due to surface roughness.


Author(s):  
M Jagatia ◽  
Z M Jin

Elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) analysis was carried out in this study for a novel metal-on-metal hip prosthesis, which consists of a cobalt-chrome alloy femoral head articulating against a cobalt-chrome alloy acetabular insert connected to a titanium fixation shell through a taper. Finite element models were developed to investigate the effect of the pelvic bone and the load on the predicted contact pressure distribution between the two bearing surfaces under dry conditions. The finite element method was used to develop elasticity models for both the femoral and the acetabular components; it was found that the elastic deformation of the acetabular insert was mainly dependent on the load, rather than the detailed pressure distribution. A modified solution methodology was accordingly developed to couple the elasticity models for both the femoral and the acetabular surfaces with the Reynolds equation and to solve these numerically by the finite difference method. It was found that a load increase from 500 to 2500 N had a negligible effect on the predicted maximum contact pressure and the minimum film thickness, due to the relatively flexible and accommodating structure of the acetabular insert. Furthermore, the predicted minimum film thickness was shown to be significantly greater than the simple estimation based on the assumption of semi-infinite solids (mono-block design) using the Hamrock and Dowson formula. The effects of the viscosity of the lubricant and the radial clearance between the femoral and the acetabular components on the predicted lubricating film thickness were investigated under both in vitro simulator testing and in vivo walking conditions.


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