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Demonstration of the Feasibility of High Temperature Bearing Lubrication From Carbonaceous Gases.

Authors :
RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INST TROY NY DEPT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Blanchet, Thierry A.
Sawyer, W. G.
RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INST TROY NY DEPT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Blanchet, Thierry A.
Sawyer, W. G.
Source :
DTIC AND NTIS
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

Research has been conducted on silicon nitride pin-on-disk sliding contacts at temperatures of up to 520 deg C, and four-ball rolling contacts with silicon nitride balls and 52100 steel or silicon nitride races at 590 deg C. These tests were conducted in a variety of gaseous environments in order to determine the effects of simulated engine exhaust gas on the carbonaceous gas decomposition lubrication scheme. In rolling tests with steel races and exhaust gas the wear track depth was roughly half that of tests run in nitrogen gas alone. The deposition of lubricous microcrystalline graphitic carbon on the rolling surfaces, generated from the carbon monoxide within the exhaust gas mixture, was verified by microfocused Raman spectroscopy. Ten-fold reductions in rolling wear could be achieved by the exhaust gas atmosphere in cases where water vapor was removed or not present. The exhaust gas mixture alone was not found to provide any lubricating effect on silicon nitride sliding contacts, where the rate of wear greatly exceeds the rate of carbon deposition. Directed admixture of acetylene (as low as 5% of the exhaust gas flow rates), has provided reductions in both wear volume and coefficient of friction by factors of 60X and 20X respectively for sliding contacts during the initial 80m of sliding distance. Exhaust gas atmosphere with the acetylene admixture provided 650X reductions in steady state wear rate compared to that measured for sliding contacts in dry N2. Such acetylene admixture also augments the ability of the exhaust gas atmosphere to lubricate high-temperature rolling contacts, with up to 25-fold reductions in wear track depth compared to those measured in the presence of N2 alone.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
DTIC AND NTIS
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn831645618
Document Type :
Electronic Resource