Publication | Closed Access
An Investigation of Lubricant Film Thickness in Sliding Compliant Contacts
55
Citations
19
References
2010
Year
Tribological CoatingEngineeringFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringRheological MeasurementFluid PropertiesMechanicsContact MechanicSliding WearRheologyMaterials ScienceHydrodynamic LubricationFluid Film ThicknessFilm Thickness ProfilesPiston-ring LubricationTribological PropertyMicrofabricationApplied PhysicsLubricant Film ThicknessMechanics Of Materials
Abstract An optical interferometric technique has been used to investigate fluid film thickness in sliding, isoviscous elastohydrodynamic contacts (I-EHL). Monochromatic two-beam interferometry has been employed to map lubricant film thickness across a range of applied loads and entrainment speeds. The contact was formed between an elastomer sphere and plain glass disc, illuminated under red light, λ= 630 nm. Experimental work has employed sunflower oil and glycerol/water solutions as the test lubricants, due to their similar refractive indices and varying viscosity. A black-and-white-image-intensified camera has been employed to capture interference images and a computer processing technique used to analyse these images, pixel by pixel, and create film thickness maps based on their gray-scale intensity representations. Comparison of film thickness results to theoretical models shows reasonable qualitative agreement. Experimental results show both a reduced horseshoe, which is limited to the rear of the contact, and wedge-shaped film thickness profile within the Hertzian contact region. This is unlike conventional hard EHL contacts where the horseshoe-shaped pressure constriction extends around the contact toward the inlet. Experimental results suggest that film thickness profiles take on a convergent wedge shape similar to that used in many hydrodynamic bearings. It is likely that this wedge is largely responsible for generating fluid pressure and therefore the load-carrying capacity of the contact. KEY WORDS: Low Elastic Modulus EHLOptical InterferometryIsoviscous–ElasticElastohydrodynamicElastomeric Review led by Liming Chang
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1