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                                                      VIII
               Component Performance
               and Design Data




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                          58 Fundamentals of Lubrication
                             Elastohydrodynamic

                                            Michael M. Khonsari and D. Y. Hua
               CONTENTS

                Nomenclature.................................................................................................................................611
                Geometry of Contact....................................................................................................................613
                Dry Contact....................................................................................................................................614
                Elastohydrodynamic Line Contact..............................................................................................616
                Elastohydrodynamic Elliptical Contact.......................................................................................621
                Starvation........................................................................................................................................625
                Thermal Correction.......................................................................................................................625
                Partial-Film EHL............................................................................................................................627
                Traction............................................................................................................................................627
                Examples.........................................................................................................................................630
                References.......................................................................................................................................636


               NOMENCLATURE




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                 613


               GEOMETRY OF CONTACT

               A general Hertzian contact between two bodies is shown in Figure 1.1 Two principal planes are
               used to characterize the geometry at the point of contact. Rxl, Ryl, and Rx2, Ry2 are principal radii
               for body 1 and body 2, respectively. In general, the principal planes of body 1 and body 2 may
               not coincide. However, for most engineering machine elements, the principal radii Rxl and Rx2,
               as well as Ry1, and Ry2 lie in the same plane. In this chapter, the following equivalent radii and
               equivalent modulus of elasticity are introduced.




               FIGURE 1 Geometry of elliptical contact.1

                   The equivalent radius in x direction is




               and the equivalent radius in y direction is




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                where “+” and “-” represent convex and concave of the surface 2, respectively. Then, the curvature
                sum in x and y direction is defined as




                The equivalent elastic modulus is




                The above equations are valid for the general case of an elliptical contact as formed between two ellip-
                soids with aligned principal axes, two crowned cylinders, or two cylinders that cross at right angle. The
                elliptical contact can be reduced to two special cases:

                      Circular contact — when Rx1 = Ryl = R1 and Rx2 = Ry2 = R2, i.e., contact between two spheres.
                             In this case, R = 1/(1/R1 + 1/R2).
                      Line contact — both Ryl and Ry2 are infinity. Then, Ry → ∞ and the curvature sum R = Rx.
                             (cf. Figure 2).




                FIGURE 2 Line contact: (a) nonconformal; (b) conformal; (c) equivalent elastic cylinder and rigid
                surface.

                DRY CONTACT
                LINE CONTACT
                Two cylinders pressed against one another under a normal load will produce a plane rectangular con-
                tact area. If the cylinders are unequal, the contact area is not truly rectangular. Nevertheless, the plane
                contact is a reasonable assumption. Under a normal load, w, the “contact patch” will have width of
                2b. In the absence of lubricant, the normal load is parabolically distributed over this area. The half-
                width of contact and the maximum Hertzian contact pressure are functions of the load per unit
                length, the equivalent curvature radius, R, and the equivalent elastic modulus, E. The


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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                              615


               Hertzian predictions of mean pressure, the magnitude and location of the maximum shear
               stress, as well as the normal approach of the centers are listed in Table 1.

               CIRCULAR CONTACT
               The contact between two spheres forms a circular region whose diameter is 2a. The radius of
               the contact and the maximum pressure in terms of the load, radii of the spheres, and elastici-
               ty modulus are given in Table 1 along with mean pressure, maximum shear stress, maximum
               tensile stress, and the normal approach of the center.




               ELLIPTICAL CONTACT
               The geometry of an elliptical contact is shown in Figure 1. The elliptic parameter k is defined
               as the ratio of the ellipse semimajor axis a to that of semiminor axis b. In general, the ellipti-
               cal parameter requires solving the first and the second elliptical integrals. The approximation
               of the elliptical parameter and the integrals can be used to simplify the expression which is
               related to the radius ratio.2 The definition and the approximation equations are listed in Table
               2. These approximations are valid for the range of 1 ≤ Ry/Rx≤ 100, or 1 ≤ κ ≤ 18.



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                    The radii of the elliptical contact, a and b, as well as the maximum Hertzian pressure, pH, are
                functions of several parameters such as load, equivalent radius of the bodies, and the elasticity mod-
                ulus, as well as the elliptic parameter and the elliptic integral. The appropriate equations are listed in
                Table 1. The contact deformation at the center of the contact is also provided in Table 1.

                ELASTOHYDRODYNAMIC LINE CONTACT
                FILM SHAPE AND PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION
                A typical film shape and pressure distribution of elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) is shown
                in Figure 3. Generally, EHL pressure distribution closely resembles the dry Hertzian contact with
                the major exception of a pressure build-up in the inlet region and a pressure spike in the exit region.
                Existence of the sharp pressure spike accompanied by a film constriction at the exit region are
                important characteristics of the elastohydrodynamic lubrication regime.
                    Several trends in EHL may be noted. First, increasing speed or decreasing load tend to increase
                the magnitude of pressure spike and move its location towards the inlet region. Under very heavy
                loading, the pressure spike tends to decrease and eventually vanish, i.e., the pressure profile
                approaches that of the dry Hertzian. In EHL applications, both the maximum Hertzian contact
                pressure and the pressure spike are important parameters. Although the pressure spike is very nar-
                row, its occurrence is very important since it may produce high subsurface stresses that directly
                affect the rolling element bearing fatigue life.
                    The minimum film thickness at the film constriction compared to surface roughness dictates
                whether the lubrication film is thick enough to protect the surfaces. The central film thickness
                (essentially the parallel central region) is also a useful parameter in engineering design. The film
                thickness is reduced by starvation of the lubricant and by inlet heating as discussed in sections on
                “Starvation” and “Thermal Correction.”
                    The appropriate EHL equations can be conveniently grouped in terms of the following dimen-
                sionless parameters:




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                                       617
                                                                FIGURE 3 © 1997shapePress, pressure distribution of line contact.
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                where the viscosity–pressure coefficient is defined as




                In nonconformal contacts, it is important to include the variation of viscosity with pressure.
                There are two general relationship. The Barus viscosity–pressure relation is



                The typical values of viscosity-pressure coefficient a for several lubricants are listed in Table
                3.3 The other relation due to Roelands4 is given below:




                The typical value for z is 0.6, S0 is 1.1 and a is 5.1 × 10-9
                     The EHL formulae reported in this chapter are based on Barus’ equation unless otherwise spec-
                ified.

                REGIMES OF FLUID FILM LUBRICATION
                      Many expressions for evaluating EHL film thickness are available in the literature. These are
                obtained using curve fitting techniques to the numerical solutions of the governing equations that
                involve the Reynolds equation coupled with surface deformation. These expressions, however, only
                apply to a particular range of operation conditions and cannot be extrapolated into different regimes.
                It is, therefore, necessary to define the regimes for appropriate usage of the film thickness expressions.
                Referring to Figure 4, the following regimes may be defined:5
                   • Rigid-isoviscous, load is not high enough to produce either an appreciable viscosity change or elas-
                     tic deformation of contact surfaces
                   • Rigid-viscous, significant viscosity increase occurs due to high pressure but the elastic deformation
                     of contact surfaces is negligible
                   • Elastic-isoviscous, elastic deformation of contact surfaces is quite large compared to the film thick-
                     ness but the viscosity change due to pressure is negligible
                   • Elastic-viscous,6 viscosity changes due to pressure and elastic deformation of contact surfaces
                     play important roles. This is the regime of “full” EHL

                FILM THICKNESS FORMULAE
                The following dimensionless groups conveniently categorize the appropriate regime:




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                 619




               Film thickness formulae for the above-mentioned regimes are listed in Table 4.

               PRESSURE SPIKE FORMULAE
               Pressure spike amplitude and its locations are also determined by curve fitting the results of numeri-
               cal simulations. Data which were used in curve fitting covered a wide range of operating parameters
               with dimensionless load W varying from 0.2045 × 10-4, dimensionless speed U varying from 0.1 × 10-11
               tp 5.0 × 10-11, and values of dimensionless materials parameter G of 2504, 5007, and 7511. One
               must check to make certain that these restrictions are satisfied for a given application.
                    The pressure spike magnitude and its location are determined from the following expressions,7




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                FIGURE 4 Lubrication regimes of line contact.4 (From Roelands, D.J.A., Correlational
                Aspects of the Velocity-Temperature-Pressure Relationship of Lubrication Oils, Druk, V.R.B.,
                Groningen, Netherlands, 1966.)

                Pressure spike location is



                   The center of pressure (the location of the center of pressure indicates the position at
                which the resulting force acts) is given by:



                Another form of minimum film thickness expression is also available,7



                In dimensional form where w is the load-per-width, minimum film thickness is




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                   621


               The central film thickness is



               ELASTOHYDRODYNAMIC ELLIPTICAL CONTACT
               The characteristic film shape and pressure distribution of an elliptical EHL is similar to that of
               the line contact. Some typical pressure and film thickness profiles predicted by the EHL theo-
               ry are shown in Figure 5.8 The maximum Hertzian contact pressure, pressure spike, and mini-
               mum film thickness, as well as central film thickness are of interest.




               FIGURE 5 Typical contour plot of film thickness (left) and pressure profile (right) for a cir-
               cular contact.8

                   In order to show the different regimes of lubrication problems, the dimensionless parameters
               defined in Equations 5 to 9 are used. The four regimes of rigid-isoviscous, rigid-viscous, elastic-iso-
               viscous and elastic-viscous are illustrated in Figure 6.9
               FILM THICKNESS FORMULAE
               To determine the appropriate regime, the following dimensionless parameter groups are defined as:




               Film thickness formulae in these different regimes are summarized in Table 4 and Table 5.
                   The minimum film thickness for more general consideration of the velocity vector is:14




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                FIGURE 6 Lubrication regimes of elliptical contact.8 (a) k = 111; (b) k = 1; (c) k = 3; (d) k = 6.

                where




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication   623




               FIGURE 6 (Continued)

               and




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                   625




               where, u and v are mean velocities in x and y direction, respectively; θ = tan-1 (u/ν). If pure
               rolling or pure sliding exists, θ = 0 and ν = 0.

               STARVATION
               Reduction of film thickness due to starvation for a line contact is shown in Figure 7. For
               starved circular contacts, the film thickness formula is:15,16




               where subscript s refers to starved boundary condition; subscript F denotes flooded contact m
               is the dimensionless distance of the inlet meniscus from the center of the contact; m* is the
               dimensionless inlet distance required for achieving flooded conditions:



               D, n, and c for different regimes are listed in Table 6.




               FIGURE 7 Influence of starvation on film thickness predicted by numerical simulation.
               Parameters hstarved and hflooded refer to the starved film thicknesses, respectively. The distance from
               the inlet meniscus to the edge of Hertzian boundary is denoted by Xj.19

               THERMAL CORRECTION
               For a line contact, film thickness reduction due to viscous heating of the lubricant at the con-
               junction inlet can be estimated by a thermal correction factor as




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                where the thermal correction factor Ct is17




                where




                ur is rolling velocity, m/s; S is slide-roll ratio; Kf is the thermal conductivity of the lubricant,
                W/(m ⋅ K).
                     Reduction of film thickness due to inlet shear heating can be estimated from Figure 8,18
                which is based on the following empirical viscosity–temperature relation.




                FIGURE 8 Thermal correction factor. Parameter µo denotes the viscosity under the ambient con-
                dition and Kf is the lubricant thermal conductivity. With a known temperature-viscosity coefficient, β,
                the dimensionless thermal parameter, Lm, and the thermal reduction factor, φf, are easily evaluated.18,19



                Parameter L* is simply




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                  627


               PARTIAL-FILM EHL
               Figure 919 illustrates full-film and partial-film elastohydrodynamic lubrication. Partial-film EHL
               is the regime where average film thickness becomes less than three times the composite sur-
               face roughness, h < 3σ. For determining partial-film EHL performance, surface roughness
               parameters required for each surface include: (1) σ, root mean square of surface roughness; (2)
               surface roughness height distribution function; (3) λ0.5x, λ0.5y, 50% correlation lengths of sur-
               face roughness in x and y directions; (4) autocorrelation function of roughness.




               FIGURE 9 Full-film and partial-film lubrication.19

                  Typical contact area patterns for oriented rough surfaces are shown in Figure 10.20
               Parameter γ is used to describe the surface pattern of the roughness.



               where λ0.5x and λ0.5y are correlation lengths at which the autocorrelation function of the profile
               is 50% of the value at the origin. The autocorrelation function is a measure of the wave length
               structure of a surface profile, defined as follows:



               where λ is the correlation length; δ is the height function along the x direction; and Rx(λ) is
               the autocorrelation function in the x direction.
                   The surface roughness correction factor is defined as


                    Effect of surface roughness on the average film thickness of EHL contacts under pure
               rolling condition is shown in Figure 1121 where Λ is film parameter, Λ = hsmooth/σ.

               TRACTION
               In EHL, as in all lubrication mechanisms, surface traction is present. In pure rolling, the rolling
               traction is FR. When sliding occurs, a sliding traction, FS, will be present. The total traction force
               on faster and slower surfaces will be



               where “+” is for the faster surface and “-” is for the slower surface.


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                FIGURE 10 Contact pattern of oriented rough surfaces: left, transverse (γ < 1); center,
                isotropic (γ = 1); and right, longitudinal (γ = 1).19,20




                FIGURE 11 Effect of surface roughness on film thickness.19,21 PH/E = 0.003; pure rolling; G
                = 3333; σ/R = 1.8 × 10-5.

                    Typical traction curves measured experimentally at various mean contact pressures are shown
                    in Figure 12. Rolling traction is much smaller than sliding traction, except for pure rolling. In
                    the low-slip region, traction increases almost linearly as slip increases. If the lubricant is assumed
                    to behave as a Newtonian fluid, this linear trend persists over large slips. However, experimental
                    measurements show that the traction curve rises linearly from pure rolling (zero traction) and
                    reaches a plateau at a certain slip ratio in the so-called nonlinear isothermal region shown in
                    Figure 12. In this region, the linearly viscous (Newtonian) constitutive equation for the lubricant
                    is no longer valid. In the so-called thermal region, traction tends to drop with increasing slip.
                    This trend can only be predicted if the model properly incorporates non-Newtonian effects with
                    thermal consideration. One example of the traction coefficient predicted, using Bair-Winer’s
                    constitutive equation22 with its comparison to experimental data, is shown in Figure 13.23. The
                    interested reader may refer to References 23 and 24 for the details of the formulation of the
                    governing equations for generalized non-Newtonian formulation including thermal effects and


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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                           629




               FIGURE 12 Experimental traction curve under various mean contact pressures, illustrating
               the linear, nonlinear isothermal, and thermal traction regimes.19

               numerical solution technique. The effects of load, speed, and inlet temperature on traction
               coefficient curves are illustrated in Figure 14. These trends are important in predicting the
               trend of traction under various operating conditions. For example, increasing the mean con-
               tact pressure tends to increase the traction coefficient, whereas increasing speed results in a
               reduction of friction.




               FIGURE 13 Comparison of thermoelastohydrodynamic traction coefficient using the Bair-
               Winer’s constitutive equation and experimental results (W = 5.5185 × 10-5, U1 = 2.8 m/s, G =
               5152, τo = 1.4 × 107 N/m2, β = 0.05).23 The experimental results are taken from a research
               report published by Zhang et al. at the Twente University of Technology 1983. (From
               Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D.Y., J. Tricol., Trans. ASME, 116(1),37–46, 1994. With permission.)




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                FIGURE 14 Effects of load, speed, and inlet temperature on the traction curve.

                EXAMPLES
                LINE CONTACT
                Consider a cylindrical roller of 40 mm diameter and 30 mm length contacting a cylinder of 120
                mm diameter which rotates at 1000 rpm. The load on the roller is 3000 N. The viscosity of the
                lubricant at ambient pressure and room temperature is 0.04 N ⋅ s/m2. The pressure viscosity
                coefficient is 2.1 × 10-8m2/N. The two surfaces are steel with an elastic modulus of 2.08 × 1011
                N/m2 and Poisson ratio of 0.3.

                Geometry of contact
                From Equation 1, the equivalent radius is




                The equivalent elastic modulus is defined by Equation 4. As the material is the same for the
                two surfaces,




                For pure rolling, the rolling velocity is




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                           631


               Dry contact
               From Table 1, the half-width of Hertzian contact is




               Maximum Hertzian contact pressure is




               Mean contact pressure is




               Maximum shear stress is



               The location of τmax is at x = 0 and z = 1.02 × 10-4m (refer to Table 1).

               Regime of lubrication
               Refer to Table 4 and Equations 5 through 9. Calculating the dimensionless parameters yields
               the following results:

                  Dimensionless velocity




                  Dimensionless material parameter



                  Dimensionless load




               To determine the regime of lubrication, from Table 4 the dimensionless viscosity parameter is




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                The dimensionless elasticity parameter is




                From Figure 4, this is within the regime of elastic-viscous and the dimensionless film thick-
                ness parameter is



                Film thickness
                From Table 4, the minimum film thickness is




                In dimensional form, we get the film thickness as



                If the alternative equation (20) is used, the minimum film thickness is



                and from Equation 22, the central film thickness is



                Starvation effect
                Assuming the distance from inlet oil meniscus to inlet edge of Hertzian boundary, xi is 2b,




                From Figure 7, the reduction of film thickness is about 0.8.

                Pressure spike
                From Equation 17, the dimensionless pressure spike amplitude is



                The dimensional pressure spike is



                      Dimensionless distance of the spike from the center of Hertzian contact by Equation 18 is




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                            633


                  The dimensional distance from the center of the pressure to the center of Hertzian contact is




               Consider the same rolling velocity and load, but with slip of 0.15 between two surfaces.
               Estimate the thermal reduction in the film thickness. Assuming β = 0.05 and Kf = 0.12 W/(m
               ⋅ K), from Equation 37



               Then using Equation 34, thermal correction factor Ct is




               ELLIPTICAL CONTACT
               Consider a steel roller of 40 mm diameter with a 50 mm crown radius (surface 1) contact with
               80 mm diameter steel cylinder (surface 2). Rotation speed of the roller is 1500 rpm and the
               cylinder is 1000 rpm. The load is 50 N. Viscosity of the lubricant is 0.028 N ⋅ s/m2. The visco-
               pressure parameter is 1.45 × 10-8 m2/N. Equivalent elastic modulus for steel is 2.3 × 1011 N/m2.

               Geometry of contact
               Radii of the two surfaces are:




               Velocities of the two surfaces are:




               Rolling velocity is




               From Equations 1 and 2, the equivalent radii are




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                From Equation 3, the curvature sum in x and y direction is,




                From Table 2, the elliptic parameter is




                Dry contact
                From Table 2, the second kind of elliptic integral is




                From Table 1, the elliptic contact radius is:




                From the definition of the elliptic parameter in Table 2



                The maximum Hertzian contact pressure is




                the mean pressure is



                Regime of lubrication
                Appropriate dimensionless parameters are:

                      Dimensionless velocity




                      Dimensionless material parameter



                      Dimensionless load




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                          635


               To determine the regime of lubrication (cf. Table 4), the dimensionless viscosity parameter is




               The dimensionless elasticity parameter is




               From Figure 6 (d), it is in the elastic-viscous regime.

               Film thickness
               From Table 4, the dimensionless minimum film thickness parameter is



               From Table 4, the dimensionless minimum film thickness is




               In dimensional form the minimum film thickness is



               The dimensionless central film thickness parameter is



               The dimensionless central film thickness is




               In dimensional form, the central film thickness is



               Starvation effect
               From Equations 31 and 32 and Table 6, m* for minimum film thickness is




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                Assuming dimensionless inlet distance m = 1.5, the reduction of minimum film thickness is




                m* for the central film thickness is




                Reduction of the central film thickness for m = 1.5 is




                REFERENCES

                   1. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Minimum Film Thickness in Elliptical Contacts for Different
                       Regimes of Fluid Film Lubricants, NASA Tech. Pap., No. 1342, 1978.
                   2. Brewe, D.E. and Hamrock, B.J., Simplified solution of elliptical contact deformation between two
                       elastic solids, J. Lubr. Technol. Trans. ASME, 99(4), 485–487, 1977.
                   3. Jones, W.R., Johnson, R.L., Sanborn, D.M., and Winer, W.O., Viscosity-pressure measurements of
                       several lubricants to 5.5 × 108 N/m2 (8 × 104 psi) and 149°C (300°F), Trans. ASLE, 18(4),
                       249–262, 1975.
                   4. Roelands, D.J.A., Correlational aspects of the viscosity-temperature-pressure relationship of lubri-
                       cating oils, Druk, V.R.B., Groningen, Netherlands, 1966.
                   5. Hooke, C.J., The elastohydrodynamic lubrication of heavily loaded contacts, J. Mech. Eng. Sci., 19(4),
                       149–156, 1977.
                   6. Dowson, D. and Higginson, G.R., Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication, Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1977.
                   7. Pan, P. and Hamrock, B.J., Simple formulae for performance parameters used in elastohydrody-
                       namically lubricated line contacts, J. Tribol., Trans. ASME, 111(2), 246–251, 1989.
                   8. Venner, C.H., Multilevel Solution of the EHL Line and Point Contact Problems, Ph.D. thesis,
                       University of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands, ISBN 90-9003974-0, 1991.
                   9. Esfahamian, M. and Hamrock, B.J., Fluid-film lubrication regimes revisited, STLE Tribol. Trans.,
                       34(4), 618–632, 1991.
                   10. Brewe, D.E., Hamrock, B.J., and Taylor, C.M., Effects of geometry on hydrodynamic film thick-
                       ness, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101(2), 231–239, 1979.
                   11. Jeng, Y.R., Hamrock, B.J., and Brewe, D.E., Piezoviscous effects in nonconformal contacts lubri-
                       cated hydrodynamically, ASLE Trans., 30(4), 452–464, 1987.
                   12. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication of elliptical contacts for materi-
                       als of low elastic modulus, I. Fully flooded conjunctions, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 100(2),
                       236–245, 1978.
                   13. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Isothermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication of point contacts, III.
                       Fully flooded results, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 99(2), 264–276, 1977.
                   14. Chittenden, R.J. et al., Theoretical analysis of isothermal EHL concentrated contacts: I and II,
                       Proc. R. Soc., London, Ser. A, 387, 245–294, 1985.




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               Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication                                                    637


                  15. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Isothermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication of point contacts, IV.
                      Starvation results, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 99(1), 15–23, 1977.
                  16. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication of elliptical contacts for materi-
                      als of low elastic modulus, II. Starved conjunctions, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101(1),
                      92–98,1979.
                  17. Gupta, P.K. et al., Visco-elastic effects in Mil-L-7808 type lubricant, I. Analytical formulation,
                      STLE Tribol. Trans., 34(4), 608–617, 1991.
                  18. Cheng, H.S., Calculation of elastohydrodynamic film thickness in high-speed rolling and sliding
                      contacts, Rep. No. MTI-67TR24, Mechanical Technology, Latham, NY, 1967.
                  19. Cheng, H.S., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication, CRC Handbook of Lubrication, Vol. 2, CRC Press,
                      1984, 139–162.
                  20. Patir, N. and Cheng, H.S., Effect of surface roughness on the central film thickness in EHD con-
                      tacts, Elastohydrodynamic and Related Topics, Proc. 5th Leeds-Lyon Symp. Tribology, Institution of
                      Mechanical Engineers, London, 1978, 15–21.
                  21. Patir, N. and Cheng, H.S., An average flow model for determining effects of three dimensional
                      roughness on partial hydrodynamic lubrication, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 100(1), 12–17,
                      1978.
                  22. Bair, S. and Winer, W.O., A rheological model for EHL contacts based on primary laboratory data,
                      J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101, 258–265, 1979.
                  23. Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D.Y., Thermal elastohydrodynamic analysis using a generalized non-
                      Newtonian formulation with application to Bair-Winer constitutive equation, J. Tribol., Trans.
                      ASME, 116(1), 37–46, 1994.
                  24. Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D. Y. Generalized non-Newtonian elastohydrodynamic lubrication,
                      Tribol. Int., 26, 45–411, 1994.




            Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.

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Tribology data handbook

  • 1. crc3904-Sec08.qxd 8/10/2007 10:51 AM Page 609 VIII Component Performance and Design Data Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 2. crc3904-Sec08.qxd 8/10/2007 10:51 AM Page 610 Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 3. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:36 AM Page 611 58 Fundamentals of Lubrication Elastohydrodynamic Michael M. Khonsari and D. Y. Hua CONTENTS Nomenclature.................................................................................................................................611 Geometry of Contact....................................................................................................................613 Dry Contact....................................................................................................................................614 Elastohydrodynamic Line Contact..............................................................................................616 Elastohydrodynamic Elliptical Contact.......................................................................................621 Starvation........................................................................................................................................625 Thermal Correction.......................................................................................................................625 Partial-Film EHL............................................................................................................................627 Traction............................................................................................................................................627 Examples.........................................................................................................................................630 References.......................................................................................................................................636 NOMENCLATURE Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC. 0-8493-3904-9/97/$0.00+$.50 1997 by CRC Press LLC 611
  • 4. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:37 AM Page 612 612 Tribology Data Handbook Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 5. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:37 AM Page 613 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 613 GEOMETRY OF CONTACT A general Hertzian contact between two bodies is shown in Figure 1.1 Two principal planes are used to characterize the geometry at the point of contact. Rxl, Ryl, and Rx2, Ry2 are principal radii for body 1 and body 2, respectively. In general, the principal planes of body 1 and body 2 may not coincide. However, for most engineering machine elements, the principal radii Rxl and Rx2, as well as Ry1, and Ry2 lie in the same plane. In this chapter, the following equivalent radii and equivalent modulus of elasticity are introduced. FIGURE 1 Geometry of elliptical contact.1 The equivalent radius in x direction is and the equivalent radius in y direction is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 6. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:37 AM Page 614 614 Tribology Data Handbook where “+” and “-” represent convex and concave of the surface 2, respectively. Then, the curvature sum in x and y direction is defined as The equivalent elastic modulus is The above equations are valid for the general case of an elliptical contact as formed between two ellip- soids with aligned principal axes, two crowned cylinders, or two cylinders that cross at right angle. The elliptical contact can be reduced to two special cases: Circular contact — when Rx1 = Ryl = R1 and Rx2 = Ry2 = R2, i.e., contact between two spheres. In this case, R = 1/(1/R1 + 1/R2). Line contact — both Ryl and Ry2 are infinity. Then, Ry → ∞ and the curvature sum R = Rx. (cf. Figure 2). FIGURE 2 Line contact: (a) nonconformal; (b) conformal; (c) equivalent elastic cylinder and rigid surface. DRY CONTACT LINE CONTACT Two cylinders pressed against one another under a normal load will produce a plane rectangular con- tact area. If the cylinders are unequal, the contact area is not truly rectangular. Nevertheless, the plane contact is a reasonable assumption. Under a normal load, w, the “contact patch” will have width of 2b. In the absence of lubricant, the normal load is parabolically distributed over this area. The half- width of contact and the maximum Hertzian contact pressure are functions of the load per unit length, the equivalent curvature radius, R, and the equivalent elastic modulus, E. The Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 7. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:37 AM Page 615 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 615 Hertzian predictions of mean pressure, the magnitude and location of the maximum shear stress, as well as the normal approach of the centers are listed in Table 1. CIRCULAR CONTACT The contact between two spheres forms a circular region whose diameter is 2a. The radius of the contact and the maximum pressure in terms of the load, radii of the spheres, and elastici- ty modulus are given in Table 1 along with mean pressure, maximum shear stress, maximum tensile stress, and the normal approach of the center. ELLIPTICAL CONTACT The geometry of an elliptical contact is shown in Figure 1. The elliptic parameter k is defined as the ratio of the ellipse semimajor axis a to that of semiminor axis b. In general, the ellipti- cal parameter requires solving the first and the second elliptical integrals. The approximation of the elliptical parameter and the integrals can be used to simplify the expression which is related to the radius ratio.2 The definition and the approximation equations are listed in Table 2. These approximations are valid for the range of 1 ≤ Ry/Rx≤ 100, or 1 ≤ κ ≤ 18. Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 8. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:37 AM Page 616 616 Tribology Data Handbook The radii of the elliptical contact, a and b, as well as the maximum Hertzian pressure, pH, are functions of several parameters such as load, equivalent radius of the bodies, and the elasticity mod- ulus, as well as the elliptic parameter and the elliptic integral. The appropriate equations are listed in Table 1. The contact deformation at the center of the contact is also provided in Table 1. ELASTOHYDRODYNAMIC LINE CONTACT FILM SHAPE AND PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION A typical film shape and pressure distribution of elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) is shown in Figure 3. Generally, EHL pressure distribution closely resembles the dry Hertzian contact with the major exception of a pressure build-up in the inlet region and a pressure spike in the exit region. Existence of the sharp pressure spike accompanied by a film constriction at the exit region are important characteristics of the elastohydrodynamic lubrication regime. Several trends in EHL may be noted. First, increasing speed or decreasing load tend to increase the magnitude of pressure spike and move its location towards the inlet region. Under very heavy loading, the pressure spike tends to decrease and eventually vanish, i.e., the pressure profile approaches that of the dry Hertzian. In EHL applications, both the maximum Hertzian contact pressure and the pressure spike are important parameters. Although the pressure spike is very nar- row, its occurrence is very important since it may produce high subsurface stresses that directly affect the rolling element bearing fatigue life. The minimum film thickness at the film constriction compared to surface roughness dictates whether the lubrication film is thick enough to protect the surfaces. The central film thickness (essentially the parallel central region) is also a useful parameter in engineering design. The film thickness is reduced by starvation of the lubricant and by inlet heating as discussed in sections on “Starvation” and “Thermal Correction.” The appropriate EHL equations can be conveniently grouped in terms of the following dimen- sionless parameters: Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 9. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:38 AM Page 617 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 617 FIGURE 3 © 1997shapePress, pressure distribution of line contact. Copyright Film CRC and LLC.
  • 10. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:38 AM Page 618 618 Tribology Data Handbook where the viscosity–pressure coefficient is defined as In nonconformal contacts, it is important to include the variation of viscosity with pressure. There are two general relationship. The Barus viscosity–pressure relation is The typical values of viscosity-pressure coefficient a for several lubricants are listed in Table 3.3 The other relation due to Roelands4 is given below: The typical value for z is 0.6, S0 is 1.1 and a is 5.1 × 10-9 The EHL formulae reported in this chapter are based on Barus’ equation unless otherwise spec- ified. REGIMES OF FLUID FILM LUBRICATION Many expressions for evaluating EHL film thickness are available in the literature. These are obtained using curve fitting techniques to the numerical solutions of the governing equations that involve the Reynolds equation coupled with surface deformation. These expressions, however, only apply to a particular range of operation conditions and cannot be extrapolated into different regimes. It is, therefore, necessary to define the regimes for appropriate usage of the film thickness expressions. Referring to Figure 4, the following regimes may be defined:5 • Rigid-isoviscous, load is not high enough to produce either an appreciable viscosity change or elas- tic deformation of contact surfaces • Rigid-viscous, significant viscosity increase occurs due to high pressure but the elastic deformation of contact surfaces is negligible • Elastic-isoviscous, elastic deformation of contact surfaces is quite large compared to the film thick- ness but the viscosity change due to pressure is negligible • Elastic-viscous,6 viscosity changes due to pressure and elastic deformation of contact surfaces play important roles. This is the regime of “full” EHL FILM THICKNESS FORMULAE The following dimensionless groups conveniently categorize the appropriate regime: Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 11. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:38 AM Page 619 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 619 Film thickness formulae for the above-mentioned regimes are listed in Table 4. PRESSURE SPIKE FORMULAE Pressure spike amplitude and its locations are also determined by curve fitting the results of numeri- cal simulations. Data which were used in curve fitting covered a wide range of operating parameters with dimensionless load W varying from 0.2045 × 10-4, dimensionless speed U varying from 0.1 × 10-11 tp 5.0 × 10-11, and values of dimensionless materials parameter G of 2504, 5007, and 7511. One must check to make certain that these restrictions are satisfied for a given application. The pressure spike magnitude and its location are determined from the following expressions,7 Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 12. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:38 AM Page 620 620 Tribology Data Handbook FIGURE 4 Lubrication regimes of line contact.4 (From Roelands, D.J.A., Correlational Aspects of the Velocity-Temperature-Pressure Relationship of Lubrication Oils, Druk, V.R.B., Groningen, Netherlands, 1966.) Pressure spike location is The center of pressure (the location of the center of pressure indicates the position at which the resulting force acts) is given by: Another form of minimum film thickness expression is also available,7 In dimensional form where w is the load-per-width, minimum film thickness is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 13. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:39 AM Page 621 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 621 The central film thickness is ELASTOHYDRODYNAMIC ELLIPTICAL CONTACT The characteristic film shape and pressure distribution of an elliptical EHL is similar to that of the line contact. Some typical pressure and film thickness profiles predicted by the EHL theo- ry are shown in Figure 5.8 The maximum Hertzian contact pressure, pressure spike, and mini- mum film thickness, as well as central film thickness are of interest. FIGURE 5 Typical contour plot of film thickness (left) and pressure profile (right) for a cir- cular contact.8 In order to show the different regimes of lubrication problems, the dimensionless parameters defined in Equations 5 to 9 are used. The four regimes of rigid-isoviscous, rigid-viscous, elastic-iso- viscous and elastic-viscous are illustrated in Figure 6.9 FILM THICKNESS FORMULAE To determine the appropriate regime, the following dimensionless parameter groups are defined as: Film thickness formulae in these different regimes are summarized in Table 4 and Table 5. The minimum film thickness for more general consideration of the velocity vector is:14 Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 14. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:39 AM Page 622 622 Tribology Data Handbook FIGURE 6 Lubrication regimes of elliptical contact.8 (a) k = 111; (b) k = 1; (c) k = 3; (d) k = 6. where Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 15. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:39 AM Page 623 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 623 FIGURE 6 (Continued) and Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 16. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:39 AM Page 624 624 Tribology Data Handbook Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 17. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 625 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 625 where, u and v are mean velocities in x and y direction, respectively; θ = tan-1 (u/ν). If pure rolling or pure sliding exists, θ = 0 and ν = 0. STARVATION Reduction of film thickness due to starvation for a line contact is shown in Figure 7. For starved circular contacts, the film thickness formula is:15,16 where subscript s refers to starved boundary condition; subscript F denotes flooded contact m is the dimensionless distance of the inlet meniscus from the center of the contact; m* is the dimensionless inlet distance required for achieving flooded conditions: D, n, and c for different regimes are listed in Table 6. FIGURE 7 Influence of starvation on film thickness predicted by numerical simulation. Parameters hstarved and hflooded refer to the starved film thicknesses, respectively. The distance from the inlet meniscus to the edge of Hertzian boundary is denoted by Xj.19 THERMAL CORRECTION For a line contact, film thickness reduction due to viscous heating of the lubricant at the con- junction inlet can be estimated by a thermal correction factor as Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 18. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 626 626 Tribology Data Handbook where the thermal correction factor Ct is17 where ur is rolling velocity, m/s; S is slide-roll ratio; Kf is the thermal conductivity of the lubricant, W/(m ⋅ K). Reduction of film thickness due to inlet shear heating can be estimated from Figure 8,18 which is based on the following empirical viscosity–temperature relation. FIGURE 8 Thermal correction factor. Parameter µo denotes the viscosity under the ambient con- dition and Kf is the lubricant thermal conductivity. With a known temperature-viscosity coefficient, β, the dimensionless thermal parameter, Lm, and the thermal reduction factor, φf, are easily evaluated.18,19 Parameter L* is simply Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 19. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 627 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 627 PARTIAL-FILM EHL Figure 919 illustrates full-film and partial-film elastohydrodynamic lubrication. Partial-film EHL is the regime where average film thickness becomes less than three times the composite sur- face roughness, h < 3σ. For determining partial-film EHL performance, surface roughness parameters required for each surface include: (1) σ, root mean square of surface roughness; (2) surface roughness height distribution function; (3) λ0.5x, λ0.5y, 50% correlation lengths of sur- face roughness in x and y directions; (4) autocorrelation function of roughness. FIGURE 9 Full-film and partial-film lubrication.19 Typical contact area patterns for oriented rough surfaces are shown in Figure 10.20 Parameter γ is used to describe the surface pattern of the roughness. where λ0.5x and λ0.5y are correlation lengths at which the autocorrelation function of the profile is 50% of the value at the origin. The autocorrelation function is a measure of the wave length structure of a surface profile, defined as follows: where λ is the correlation length; δ is the height function along the x direction; and Rx(λ) is the autocorrelation function in the x direction. The surface roughness correction factor is defined as Effect of surface roughness on the average film thickness of EHL contacts under pure rolling condition is shown in Figure 1121 where Λ is film parameter, Λ = hsmooth/σ. TRACTION In EHL, as in all lubrication mechanisms, surface traction is present. In pure rolling, the rolling traction is FR. When sliding occurs, a sliding traction, FS, will be present. The total traction force on faster and slower surfaces will be where “+” is for the faster surface and “-” is for the slower surface. Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 20. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 628 628 Tribology Data Handbook FIGURE 10 Contact pattern of oriented rough surfaces: left, transverse (γ < 1); center, isotropic (γ = 1); and right, longitudinal (γ = 1).19,20 FIGURE 11 Effect of surface roughness on film thickness.19,21 PH/E = 0.003; pure rolling; G = 3333; σ/R = 1.8 × 10-5. Typical traction curves measured experimentally at various mean contact pressures are shown in Figure 12. Rolling traction is much smaller than sliding traction, except for pure rolling. In the low-slip region, traction increases almost linearly as slip increases. If the lubricant is assumed to behave as a Newtonian fluid, this linear trend persists over large slips. However, experimental measurements show that the traction curve rises linearly from pure rolling (zero traction) and reaches a plateau at a certain slip ratio in the so-called nonlinear isothermal region shown in Figure 12. In this region, the linearly viscous (Newtonian) constitutive equation for the lubricant is no longer valid. In the so-called thermal region, traction tends to drop with increasing slip. This trend can only be predicted if the model properly incorporates non-Newtonian effects with thermal consideration. One example of the traction coefficient predicted, using Bair-Winer’s constitutive equation22 with its comparison to experimental data, is shown in Figure 13.23. The interested reader may refer to References 23 and 24 for the details of the formulation of the governing equations for generalized non-Newtonian formulation including thermal effects and Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 21. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 629 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 629 FIGURE 12 Experimental traction curve under various mean contact pressures, illustrating the linear, nonlinear isothermal, and thermal traction regimes.19 numerical solution technique. The effects of load, speed, and inlet temperature on traction coefficient curves are illustrated in Figure 14. These trends are important in predicting the trend of traction under various operating conditions. For example, increasing the mean con- tact pressure tends to increase the traction coefficient, whereas increasing speed results in a reduction of friction. FIGURE 13 Comparison of thermoelastohydrodynamic traction coefficient using the Bair- Winer’s constitutive equation and experimental results (W = 5.5185 × 10-5, U1 = 2.8 m/s, G = 5152, τo = 1.4 × 107 N/m2, β = 0.05).23 The experimental results are taken from a research report published by Zhang et al. at the Twente University of Technology 1983. (From Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D.Y., J. Tricol., Trans. ASME, 116(1),37–46, 1994. With permission.) Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 22. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 630 630 Tribology Data Handbook FIGURE 14 Effects of load, speed, and inlet temperature on the traction curve. EXAMPLES LINE CONTACT Consider a cylindrical roller of 40 mm diameter and 30 mm length contacting a cylinder of 120 mm diameter which rotates at 1000 rpm. The load on the roller is 3000 N. The viscosity of the lubricant at ambient pressure and room temperature is 0.04 N ⋅ s/m2. The pressure viscosity coefficient is 2.1 × 10-8m2/N. The two surfaces are steel with an elastic modulus of 2.08 × 1011 N/m2 and Poisson ratio of 0.3. Geometry of contact From Equation 1, the equivalent radius is The equivalent elastic modulus is defined by Equation 4. As the material is the same for the two surfaces, For pure rolling, the rolling velocity is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 23. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:40 AM Page 631 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 631 Dry contact From Table 1, the half-width of Hertzian contact is Maximum Hertzian contact pressure is Mean contact pressure is Maximum shear stress is The location of τmax is at x = 0 and z = 1.02 × 10-4m (refer to Table 1). Regime of lubrication Refer to Table 4 and Equations 5 through 9. Calculating the dimensionless parameters yields the following results: Dimensionless velocity Dimensionless material parameter Dimensionless load To determine the regime of lubrication, from Table 4 the dimensionless viscosity parameter is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 24. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 632 632 Tribology Data Handbook The dimensionless elasticity parameter is From Figure 4, this is within the regime of elastic-viscous and the dimensionless film thick- ness parameter is Film thickness From Table 4, the minimum film thickness is In dimensional form, we get the film thickness as If the alternative equation (20) is used, the minimum film thickness is and from Equation 22, the central film thickness is Starvation effect Assuming the distance from inlet oil meniscus to inlet edge of Hertzian boundary, xi is 2b, From Figure 7, the reduction of film thickness is about 0.8. Pressure spike From Equation 17, the dimensionless pressure spike amplitude is The dimensional pressure spike is Dimensionless distance of the spike from the center of Hertzian contact by Equation 18 is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 25. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 633 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 633 The dimensional distance from the center of the pressure to the center of Hertzian contact is Consider the same rolling velocity and load, but with slip of 0.15 between two surfaces. Estimate the thermal reduction in the film thickness. Assuming β = 0.05 and Kf = 0.12 W/(m ⋅ K), from Equation 37 Then using Equation 34, thermal correction factor Ct is ELLIPTICAL CONTACT Consider a steel roller of 40 mm diameter with a 50 mm crown radius (surface 1) contact with 80 mm diameter steel cylinder (surface 2). Rotation speed of the roller is 1500 rpm and the cylinder is 1000 rpm. The load is 50 N. Viscosity of the lubricant is 0.028 N ⋅ s/m2. The visco- pressure parameter is 1.45 × 10-8 m2/N. Equivalent elastic modulus for steel is 2.3 × 1011 N/m2. Geometry of contact Radii of the two surfaces are: Velocities of the two surfaces are: Rolling velocity is From Equations 1 and 2, the equivalent radii are Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 26. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 634 634 Tribology Data Handbook From Equation 3, the curvature sum in x and y direction is, From Table 2, the elliptic parameter is Dry contact From Table 2, the second kind of elliptic integral is From Table 1, the elliptic contact radius is: From the definition of the elliptic parameter in Table 2 The maximum Hertzian contact pressure is the mean pressure is Regime of lubrication Appropriate dimensionless parameters are: Dimensionless velocity Dimensionless material parameter Dimensionless load Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 27. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 635 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 635 To determine the regime of lubrication (cf. Table 4), the dimensionless viscosity parameter is The dimensionless elasticity parameter is From Figure 6 (d), it is in the elastic-viscous regime. Film thickness From Table 4, the dimensionless minimum film thickness parameter is From Table 4, the dimensionless minimum film thickness is In dimensional form the minimum film thickness is The dimensionless central film thickness parameter is The dimensionless central film thickness is In dimensional form, the central film thickness is Starvation effect From Equations 31 and 32 and Table 6, m* for minimum film thickness is Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 28. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 636 636 Tribology Data Handbook Assuming dimensionless inlet distance m = 1.5, the reduction of minimum film thickness is m* for the central film thickness is Reduction of the central film thickness for m = 1.5 is REFERENCES 1. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Minimum Film Thickness in Elliptical Contacts for Different Regimes of Fluid Film Lubricants, NASA Tech. Pap., No. 1342, 1978. 2. Brewe, D.E. and Hamrock, B.J., Simplified solution of elliptical contact deformation between two elastic solids, J. Lubr. Technol. Trans. ASME, 99(4), 485–487, 1977. 3. Jones, W.R., Johnson, R.L., Sanborn, D.M., and Winer, W.O., Viscosity-pressure measurements of several lubricants to 5.5 × 108 N/m2 (8 × 104 psi) and 149°C (300°F), Trans. ASLE, 18(4), 249–262, 1975. 4. Roelands, D.J.A., Correlational aspects of the viscosity-temperature-pressure relationship of lubri- cating oils, Druk, V.R.B., Groningen, Netherlands, 1966. 5. Hooke, C.J., The elastohydrodynamic lubrication of heavily loaded contacts, J. Mech. Eng. Sci., 19(4), 149–156, 1977. 6. Dowson, D. and Higginson, G.R., Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication, Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1977. 7. Pan, P. and Hamrock, B.J., Simple formulae for performance parameters used in elastohydrody- namically lubricated line contacts, J. Tribol., Trans. ASME, 111(2), 246–251, 1989. 8. Venner, C.H., Multilevel Solution of the EHL Line and Point Contact Problems, Ph.D. thesis, University of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands, ISBN 90-9003974-0, 1991. 9. Esfahamian, M. and Hamrock, B.J., Fluid-film lubrication regimes revisited, STLE Tribol. Trans., 34(4), 618–632, 1991. 10. Brewe, D.E., Hamrock, B.J., and Taylor, C.M., Effects of geometry on hydrodynamic film thick- ness, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101(2), 231–239, 1979. 11. Jeng, Y.R., Hamrock, B.J., and Brewe, D.E., Piezoviscous effects in nonconformal contacts lubri- cated hydrodynamically, ASLE Trans., 30(4), 452–464, 1987. 12. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication of elliptical contacts for materi- als of low elastic modulus, I. Fully flooded conjunctions, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 100(2), 236–245, 1978. 13. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Isothermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication of point contacts, III. Fully flooded results, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 99(2), 264–276, 1977. 14. Chittenden, R.J. et al., Theoretical analysis of isothermal EHL concentrated contacts: I and II, Proc. R. Soc., London, Ser. A, 387, 245–294, 1985. Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.
  • 29. crc3904-Sec08-CH-058.qxd 8/13/2007 9:41 AM Page 637 Fundamentals of Elastohydrodynamic Lubrication 637 15. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Isothermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication of point contacts, IV. Starvation results, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 99(1), 15–23, 1977. 16. Hamrock, B.J. and Dowson, D., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication of elliptical contacts for materi- als of low elastic modulus, II. Starved conjunctions, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101(1), 92–98,1979. 17. Gupta, P.K. et al., Visco-elastic effects in Mil-L-7808 type lubricant, I. Analytical formulation, STLE Tribol. Trans., 34(4), 608–617, 1991. 18. Cheng, H.S., Calculation of elastohydrodynamic film thickness in high-speed rolling and sliding contacts, Rep. No. MTI-67TR24, Mechanical Technology, Latham, NY, 1967. 19. Cheng, H.S., Elastohydrodynamic lubrication, CRC Handbook of Lubrication, Vol. 2, CRC Press, 1984, 139–162. 20. Patir, N. and Cheng, H.S., Effect of surface roughness on the central film thickness in EHD con- tacts, Elastohydrodynamic and Related Topics, Proc. 5th Leeds-Lyon Symp. Tribology, Institution of Mechanical Engineers, London, 1978, 15–21. 21. Patir, N. and Cheng, H.S., An average flow model for determining effects of three dimensional roughness on partial hydrodynamic lubrication, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 100(1), 12–17, 1978. 22. Bair, S. and Winer, W.O., A rheological model for EHL contacts based on primary laboratory data, J. Lubr. Technol., Trans. ASME, 101, 258–265, 1979. 23. Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D.Y., Thermal elastohydrodynamic analysis using a generalized non- Newtonian formulation with application to Bair-Winer constitutive equation, J. Tribol., Trans. ASME, 116(1), 37–46, 1994. 24. Khonsari, M.M. and Hua, D. Y. Generalized non-Newtonian elastohydrodynamic lubrication, Tribol. Int., 26, 45–411, 1994. Copyright © 1997 CRC Press, LLC.