AGMA 07FTM14-2007 Roughness and Lubricant Chemistry Effects in Micropitting《微点蚀的粗糙度和润滑剂化学影响》.pdf
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1、07FTM14Roughness and Lubricant ChemistryEffects in Micropittingby: A.V. Olver, D. Dini, and E. Lain, Imperial College,and T.A. Beveridge and D.Y. Hua, Caterpillar, Inc.TECHNICAL PAPERAmerican Gear Manufacturers AssociationRoughness and Lubricant Chemistry Effects inMicropittingA.V. Olver, D. Dini an
2、d E. Lain, Imperial Collegeand T.A. Beveridge and D.Y. Hua, Caterpillar, Inc.The statements and opinions contained herein are those of the author and should not be construed as anofficial action or opinion of the American Gear Manufacturers Association.AbstractMicropitting has been studied using a d
3、isc machine in which a central carburised steel test roller contactsthree, harder, counter-rollers (“rings”) with closely controlled roughness. We varied the roughness usingdifferent finishing techniques and investigated the effects of different oil base-stocks and additives, whilstkeeping the visco
4、sity approximately constant. We also developed a predictive model for the approximateanalysis of rough-surface elastohydrodynamic lubrication based on the FFT approach of Hooke.Damageonthetestrollersincludeddensemicropitting and“micropittingerosion”inwhichtensofmicronsofthe test surface were complet
5、ely removed. This phenomenon is particularly damaging in gear teeth where ithas the potential to destroy profile accuracy. It was found that anti-wear additives led to a high rate ofmicropitting erosion and that the effect correlated more or less inversely with simple sliding wear results.There were
6、 also appreciable effects from base-stock chemistry.The key parameter affecting the severity of damage seemed to be the near-surface shear stress amplitudearising from the evolved roughness; different chemistries led to the evolution of different roughness duringinitial running and thence to differe
7、nt contact stresses and different levels of damage.Copyright 2007American Gear Manufacturers Association500 Montgomery Street, Suite 350Alexandria, Virginia, 22314October, 2007ISBN: 978-1-55589-918-91Roughness and Lubricant Chemistry Effects in MicropittingA.V. Olver, D. Dini, and E. Lain, Imperial
8、College,and T.A. Beveridge and D.Y. Hua, Caterpillar Inc., Peoria, ILINTRODUCTIONIn gear teeth, the phenomenon of micropitting isnow widely recognized,either asa damagemecha-nism with a particular visual appearance (“greystaining”), or alternatively by its characteristic fea-turesoffinesurfacecracks
9、withaparticulargeome-try and orientation. 1-3. However, micropitting isa phenomenon which extends beyond gearing af-fecting a wide range of mechanical components inwhichrolling-slidingcontacttakesplace,notablyin-cluding rolling bearings and cams. The key diag-nostic feature appears to be surface cra
10、cking on ascale appreciably smaller than the dimensions ofthe nominal area of contact (usually Hertzian). Inturn this is associated with the stresses caused bysurface roughness. It is rolling contact fatiguecaused by roughness 3.Roughness of surfaces which are brought into con-tact creates local hig
11、h pressures and stresses. Inrolling contacts these high stresses will always becyclic in nature since the rolling motion causes thecontact pressures at a particular position to pulsateasthecontactsweepsacrossthesurface. Iftheop-positesurface,the“counterface”,isroughandthereisslidingpresent,eachpassa
12、geofthecontactgivesrise to many cycles of stress as the crests of theroughness slide past each point on the originalsurface, causing a rapidly pulsating pressure.In turn, it is hardly surprising that the high cyclicstresses cause metal fatigue and thereby lead tocracking inthe near-surface. However,
13、this formoffatigue is evidently rather peculiar in nature andshows some features not shared, for example, bytooth root fatigue in gears. Among these are thefollowing:Thestressfieldismostlycompressivebutwithahigh shear stress range, so crack opening can-noteasilybecausedbytheexternalloads;thereisfric
14、tionbetweenthecrackfacesand,nearlyal-ways,thereiscrackfacedamagemakingfrac-tography particularly difficult.The stresses are also non-proportional (stresscomponents do not rise and fall in proportion toone another) and randomly distributed in time,so stress cycles are difficult to count even if thein
15、stantaneous pressure field can be analyzed.The resultant cracking is often very dense andaccompanied by extensive plasticity. Thismakes formal fracture mechanics treatmentcomplex anddifficult. It alsopredisposes theaf-fectedsurfacetoseverewear(“micropittingero-sion”) a feature particularly damaging
16、to gearteethwhereseriousprofilelossmayresult,lead-ingtonoise,vibration,dynamicloadsandsome-times, consequential damage to the transmis-sion system.As a result for these difficulties, the development ofcalculation methods to ensure protection from mi-cropitting has often resulted in procedures whicha
17、re complex, conjectural in nature and difficult tovalidate. The subject has occupied a large amountofeffortinthegearingindustryworld-wide,notleastfrom AGMA 4.However, recent years have seen substantial ad-vancesinthetheoryoflubrication. Untilrecently,al-though designers could calculate the “EHL film
18、thickness” (using smooth body assumptions) andcompare it to the measured roughness of gearteeth, it was not possible to describe how thestresses in the affected surface would be affected.For many practical gear engineers or would-be fa-tigue analysts, this rather made the whole exercisepointless! St
19、okes 5 is particularly scathing aboutthe contribution of elastohydrodynamic lubrication(EHL) to gear design.In the present paper we examine how a simplifiedmicro-EHL analysis can be used to make predic-tions of near surface stresses and we comparethese to some experiments to show how thestresses are
20、 related to the development ofmicropitting erosion.In a previous FTM paper 6 it was shown that cer-tain oil additives promote micropitting by maintain-ingtheroughness(and theconsequent stresses)at2a relatively high level. Here we made use of thesame additive (a zinc diethyl-dithio-phosphate,ZDDP) so
21、 that we could keep the surface rough-ness approximately constant during the experi-ment, facilitating the analysis. An alternative ap-proach in which the developing topography isexplicitly analyzed has also been attemptedrecently 7.Theory of micro-elastohydrodynamiclubricationThetheoryofelastohydro
22、dynamiclubrication(EHL)ofsmoothsurfaceswasdevelopedinthemid-twen-tiethcenturybyErtel,Petrusevich,Dowsonandoth-ers,largelyinresponsetothequest forunderstand-ing of gear-tooth related problems. (See 8.) Itsapplication to (smooth) gear teeth is fairly straight-forward although it is necessary to addres
23、s the fric-tionaltemperaturerise inthe teeth. However,whenroughness is present, although a continuous fluidfilm persists, there are variations of pressure andfilm thickness associated with the roughness. Ingeneral, the roughness sweeps through the con-tact, so the problem is very much complicated by
24、the time-dependent (as well as spatially depen-dent) nature of the pressure and separation. It wasfound that numerical solution of the governing elas-tic and Reynolds equations was very difficult be-cause the elastic deformations are very largecomparedtothesurfaceroughnessandtothethick-ness of the f
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