Flow Visualization in a Pocketed Thrust Washer

TRIBOLOGY TRANSACTIONS(2012)

Cited 26|Views4
No score
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to experimentally and numerically investigate oil flow in surface-pocketed thrust washers. In order to achieve the experimental aspects of this investigation, a thrust washer test rig was designed and developed to visualize the lubricant flow at the contact interface. A novel approach for creating the pockets was developed to allow optical inspection of the lubricant during thrust washer operation. The thrust washers were fabricated using a glass disk with a thin layer of steel shim stock adhered to the surface. The micrometer-thick shim stock was machined using an Nd:YAG laser to create the circular pocket geometries and then glued to the glass disk. A mirror and camera were placed below the semitransparent washer to observe the lubricant flow in the pocket. The results obtained from this configuration illustrate a cavitation bubble forming on the leading edge of the pocket followed by a sharp transition back to liquid. The size of the cavitation area was found to be a function of rotational speed, nominal bearing pressure (NBP), viscosity, and pocket geometry. The cavitation area ratio (gaseous region divided by the pocket area) increased for greater speeds and higher viscosities and decreased for larger pocket diameters, deeper pockets, and higher NBPs. The friction force for various thrust washer designs was also measured as a function of load, speed, and lubricant. The results showed that shallower, wider pockets provided the lowest friction. It was found that, generally, the conditions that minimize friction also result in a stable cavitation region. ANSYS Fluent computational fluid dynamics software was used to develop a three-dimensional model of the pocketed thrust washer utilizing the full Navier-Stokes equations to investigate the cavitation and pressure distribution occurring at the contact and corroborate the experimental results.
More
Translated text
Key words
Surface Modification,Cavitation,Flow Visualization,Hydrodynamic Lubrication,Thrust Bearings
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined