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Tribology Engineering Materials Chapter 3 Chapter 3: Goals

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Tribology Engineering Materials Chapter 3 Chapter 3: Goals Understand the importance of tribology Types of friction and wear Review of bearing basics and lubricants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tribology Engineering Materials Chapter 3 Chapter 3: Goals


1
Tribology
  • Engineering Materials
  • Chapter 3

2
Chapter 3 Goals
  • Understand the importance of tribology
  • Types of friction and wear
  • Review of bearing basics and lubricants

3
Chapter 3 Purpose
  • Tribology is largely unknown, so this is an
    informative chapter
  • Term coined in England in 1960s
  • Provide knowledge of the basis of tribology and
    how tribological properties of materials affect
    material selection

4
Chapter 3 Introduction
  • Automobile Highlights the importance of
    friction, wear, and lubrication
  • All moving systems must deal with these
  • Wear is 1 cause of auto death
  • Examples of wear
  • Earthquakes
  • Arthritis
  • Joint replacements
  • 5 of US GDP
  • Chapter presents fundamentals of friction and wear

5
3.1 History of Friction Wear
  • FmN
  • Devices used to study friction
  • Fig 3-1
  • Friction consists of forces on an object
    resisting motion when motion is attempted
  • Static and kinetic friction

6
3.2 Contact Mechanics
  • Role of physicists, chemists, mechanical
    engineers, and materials scientists
  • Contact mechanics (Fig 3-3)
  • Form of engineering concentrating on stresses
    deformation at the microscopic areas that form
    real areas of contact between solids
  • Hertzian stress equations (Fig 3-4)

7
3.3 Friction
  • Causes
  • Rugosities (Fig 3-5)
  • F Fa Fp Fs Fn
  • m S/P
  • Never 0
  • Rubber materials ?
  • Measurement (Fig 3-6)
  • Types (Fig 3-7)
  • Fig 3-8 Friction coefficients v. normal force
  • Fig 3-9 Stribeck curve
  • Hydrodynamic, boundary, elastohydrodynamic
    lubrication

8
3.3 Friction
  • Measurement
  • Lambda ratio
  • Film thickness
  • Significance
  • Value of controlled friction
  • Overall objective of tribology is control of
    friction and wear
  • Testing under simulated service conditions
    produces the most valid data
  • Designs
  • Continuous processes
  • Rotating machinery

9
3.4 Definition of Wear
  • ASTM G 40
  • Damage to a solid surface, generally involving
    progressive loss of material, due to relative
    motion between the surface and a contacting
    substance(s)
  • Components wear or erode in different ways
  • 13 forms of wear
  • 5 forms of erosion

10
3.5 Types of Friction
  • Solid Particle surfaces impinged by solid
    particles carried by a gas
  • ASTM G 76
  • Erosion (particle) aMV2(r)(P)
  • Slurry Erosion slurry moves across a surface
  • ASTM G 75 Miller number (1 to 1000)
  • Liquid Impact impact of very high-velocity
    liquid droplets (ASTM G 73)
  • Liquid Erosion liquid impinging or moving along
    the surface of a solid
  • Cavitation implosion of bubbles near a surface

11
3.6 Types of Wear
  • Surface Fatigue
  • Pitting
  • Impact Wear
  • Spalling
  • Brinelling
  • Summary
  • Material characteristics that control wear start
    at the atomic level and progress to the surface
    texture of a part
  • Fig 3-27
  • Sliding Contact
  • Adhesive
  • Archard Eqn.
  • Galling
  • Scuffing Scoring
  • Oxidative ear
  • Fretting
  • Abrasion
  • Low-stress Abrasion
  • High-stress Abrasion
  • Gouging Abrasion
  • Polishing

12
3.7 Bearings
  • Plain two-body sliding systems
  • Rolling Contact three-body tribosystems
  • Bearing Life
  • Rate life L10
  • Selection
  • Precision five grades
  • Application Fig 3-29 3-31
  • Internal Clearance - classes

13
3.7 Bearings
  • Selection
  • Cage materials
  • Shaft and housing fits 7 criteria
  • Materials
  • High-carbon, chromium steel
  • Stainless steel
  • Tool steel
  • Silicon nitride ceramic

14
3.8 Lubricants
  • Definition substances that separate rubbing
    surfaces and readily shear while adhering to
    surfaces
  • Categories
  • Oil
  • Mineral v. synthetic
  • Viscosity index (VI)
  • Detergents
  • Greases
  • 90 oil
  • Three main categories based on thickener type
  • DN value
  • Solid-Film
  • Organic v. inorganic
  • Choose based on apparent pressure

15
Summary Critical Concepts
  • Wear friction are not developed as principles
    or laws yet
  • They are system effects
  • Different modes of wear
  • A number of ASTM standards for testing
  • Lubrication reduces friction and wear

16
Case History
  • Tenters used in Plastic Film Making
  • Drafting and tentering films
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