Abstract

Fully flooded lubrication is the ideal state for a rolling bearing; this is especially true in the aggressive environment of a wind turbine transmission where bearings are subject to intermittent operation and highly variable loading. In this paper, a novel ultrasonic reflection method is used to detect the presence of oil between rollers in the bearing. Ultrasonic sensors were instrumented on the static inner (lab) and outer (field) bearing raceways and reflections were captured as the rollers travelled past the sensor. The proportion of the sound wave reflected (known as the reflection coefficient, R) is dependent on the acoustic mismatch of the materials either side of the interface. Changes in R indicate either a steel–air or steel–oil interface as R values transitioned from 1 to 0.95, respectively, and even lower for a steel–roller interface. Consequently, it was possible to detect the presence of lubricant on the raceway between roller passes. From the laboratory measurements, the recurring reflection coefficient patterns between roller passes were used to identify the lubrication condition of the raceway. An absence of these patterns between roller passes indicated the absence of lubricant on the bearing surface. For the field measurements, three bearing lubrication conditions (partial, insufficient, and fully lubricated) were observed. Partially and insufficiently lubricated datasets were found to occur mostly during transient operation. As transient operation is often accompanied by overloading and torque reversals, coupled with the lubrication issues, these all act to increase the risk of premature bearing failure.

Highlights

  • Four roller passes can be observed within the measurements

  • Since no lubricant is present on the raceway surface, no recurring pattern is observed within the reflection coefficient measurements between roller passes as the

  • An ultrasonic reflection coefficient-based method has been used for in-situ detection of bearing lubrication condition through qualitative means

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Summary

Introduction

Wind turbine (WT) gearboxes rarely achieve their 20-year design life and often fail prematurely [1]. Multiple failure modes exist for the gearbox, with most of these associated with bearing degradation [2,5], concentrated at the high-speed shaft (HSS) stage [2]. Lubrication failure was identified as one of the typical faults in wind turbine bearings [2,6,7,8]. As such, monitoring of bearing lubrication is crucial for better understanding of lubrication failures with the aim of scheduling effective preventive maintenance in the hopes of improving the reliability of gearbox bearings

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