Abstract

Micropitting is a form of surface fatigue damage that happens at the surface roughness scale in lubricated contacts in commonly used machine elements, such as gears and bearings. It occurs where the specific film thickness (ratio of smooth surface film thickness to composite surface roughness) is sufficiently low for the contacts to operate in the mixed lubrication regime, where the load is in part carried by direct asperity contacts. Micropitting is currently seen as a greater issue for gear designers than is regular pitting fatigue failure as the latter can be avoided by control of steel cleanliness. This paper describes the results of both theoretical and experimental studies of the onset of micropitting in test disks operated in the mixed lubrication regime. A series of twin disk mixed-lubrication experiments were performed in order to examine the evolution of micropitting damage during repeated cyclic loading of surface roughness asperities as they pass through the contact. Representative measurements of the surfaces used in the experimental work were then evaluated using a numerical model which combines a transient line contact micro-elastohydrodynamic lubrication (micro-EHL) simulation with a calculation of elastic sub-surface stresses. This model generated time-history of stresses within a block of material as it passes through the contact, based on the instantaneous surface contact pressure and traction at each point in the computing mesh at each timestep. This stress time-history was then used within a shear-strain-based fatigue model to calculate the cumulative damage experienced by the surface due to the loading sequence experienced during the experiments. The proposed micro-EHL model results and the experimental study were shown to agree well in terms of predicting the number of loading cycles that are required for the initial micropitting to occur.

Highlights

  • Micropitting is a type of surface fatigue that is associated with roughness effects, which occurs on the working faces of gear teeth but can occur in rolling element bearings

  • Processing, attention is focussing on micropitting, given recent problems with micropitting in the speed increasing gearboxes of wind turbines [2, 3]

  • Using the real, measured surface roughness profiles under the real elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) operating conditions is judged to be an important requirement to quantify the surface fatigue lives because surface profile topography is significantly modified by running-in

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Summary

Introduction

Micropitting is a type of surface fatigue that is associated with roughness effects, which occurs on the working faces of gear teeth but can occur in rolling element bearings. The mixed lubrication pressure and traction distributions were calculated by interpolation between the smooth surface (Hertzian) pressure distribution and the dry contact problem They calculated sub-surface stress distributions and adopted the Dang-Vang multi-axial high-cycle fatigue criterion to predict micropitting in spur gear tooth flanks. Previous work by researchers at Cardiff has developed micro-EHL-based fatigue models for the contact of real rough surfaces under mixed lubrication conditions [23] These models have been previously used to compare the predictions of various fatigue criteria used to assess fatigue performance [24], or to make qualitative comparison with micropitting tests [5]. Using the real, measured surface roughness profiles under the real EHL operating conditions is judged to be an important requirement to quantify the surface fatigue lives because surface profile topography is significantly modified by running-in

Mixed‐EHL Model and Material Fatigue Theory
Micropitting Experiments
Fatigue Modelling and Comparison with Experimental Results
Conclusions
32. Ministry of Defence Defence
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