Abstract

Vibration sensors are, generally, fixed on the housing of planetary gearboxes for vibration monitoring. When a local fault occurred on the tooth of a planet gear, along with the system operating, the faulty tooth will mesh with the ring gear or sun gear at different positions referring to the fixed sensor. With consideration of the attenuation effect, the amplitudes of the fault-induced vibrations will be time-varying due to the time-varying transfer paths. These variations in signals are valuable information to identify the fault existence as well as the severity and types. However, the fault-meshing positions are time-varying and elusive due to the complicated kinematics or the compound motion behaviors of the internal rotating components. It is tough to accurately determine every fault meshing position though acquiring information from multi-sensors. However, there should exist some specific patterns of the fault meshing positions referring to the single sensor. To thoroughly investigate these motion patterns make effective fault diagnosis feasible merely by a single sensor. Unfortunately, so far few pieces of literature explicitly demonstrate these motion patterns in this regard. This article proposes a method to derive the motion periods of the fault-meshing positions with a faulty planet gear tooth, in which two conditions are considered: 1. The fault-meshing position initially occurs at the ring gear; 2. The fault-meshing position initially occurs at the sun gear. For each scenario, we derive the mathematical expression of the motion period in terms of rotational angles. These motion periods are, in essence, based on the teeth number of gears of a given planetary gearbox. Finally, the application of these motion periods for fault diagnosis is explored with experimental studies. The minimal required data length of a single sensor for effective fault diagnosis is revealed based on the motion periods.

Highlights

  • Assembled with a sun gear, several planet gears and a ring gear, planetary gearboxes have brought superior features such as large transmission ratio, high torque to weight ratios and coaxial shafting [1,2,3] in transmission train [4,5,6,7,8]

  • With consideration of the initial fault-meshing position that the faulty tooth of a planet gear meshing with the ring gear, the motion period of the fault-meshing positions is derived in terms of the rotation angle, which intrinsically depends on the teeth number of a planetary gearbox

  • Due to the unique initial fault meshing position of a faulty planet gear, two scenarios are considered, namely: 1. Initial fault meshing position occurs at the ring gear; 2

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Summary

Introduction

Assembled with a sun gear, several planet gears and a ring gear, planetary gearboxes have brought superior features such as large transmission ratio, high torque to weight ratios and coaxial shafting [1,2,3] in transmission train [4,5,6,7,8]. Different tooth (not the faulty tooth) of the considered planet gear might be in meshing at the original position [18,19,20,21] In such a scenario, compound motion behaviors of the rotating components inside planetary gearboxes need to be analyzed in determining a complete pattern of the faulty gear meshing. Wang et al [24] took the fixed sensor as the reference and derived the minimal required number of rotations of a faulty sun gear returning to its initial fault-meshing position. Song [25] took the fixed sensor as the reference, who try to derive the motion periods for the faulty tooth of the sun gear or the planet gear returning to its initial fault-meshing positions of a given planetary gearbox.

Motion Periods of the Planet Gear Fault-Meshing Position
Influences of the Fault-Meshing Behavior
Motion Period of Planet Gear Fault-Meshing Behavior
Initial Fault-Meshing Position at Ring Gear
Initial Fault-Meshing with Sun Gear
Experimental Study
Conclusions
Fault-Meshing
Full Text
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