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Experimental and analytical study of gear micropitting initiation and propagation under varying loading conditions

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TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated gear micropitting initiation and propagation when subjected to varying torque loads under a constant rotational speed and found that the specific lubricant film thickness varies considerably because of changes of surface roughness after gears are subjected to various running cycles under varying torque levels.
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This article is published in Wear.The article was published on 2015-04-15 and is currently open access. It has received 27 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Micro pitting & Pinion.

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Citations
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A Dynamic Model as a Tool for Design and Optimization of Propulsion Systems of Transport Means

G. Peruń
TL;DR: In this article , a dynamic model of power transmission systems is presented to support work aimed at designing new and optimizing existing systems of that type, as well as to help diagnose them by designing diagnostic algorithms sensitive to early stages of damage development.
Book ChapterDOI

Micropitting Load Capacity of Spur and Helical Gears

TL;DR: In this article, a general survey on the micropitting damage of spur and helical gears is presented, which manifests itself to the roughness scale and the mechanism that trigger this type of damage as well as the characteristics that distinguish it from those typical of macropitting (the classical pitting) are described.
References
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Book

Handbook of Practical Gear Design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the kind of causes and causes of failure of a particular kind of gear using a variety of metrics, such as the number of Pinion Teeth, the amount of bearing failures, and the ratio of bearing failure rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of oil temperature on gear failures

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of oil temperature on gear failure modes, as well as their introduction into load carrying capacity calculation methods are shown. But the often-applied practice of increasing the severity of a gear oil test method by increasing the oil temperature has to be revised.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface contact fatigue failures in gears

TL;DR: In this article, three types of contact fatigue damage are discussed, and a number of actual examples are presented to illustrate this failure mode in practice, which can significantly reduce the load-carrying capacity of components, and may ultimately lead to complete failure of a gear.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of lubricants on micropitting and wear

TL;DR: In this article, a three-contact disc machine with a central roller in contact with three harder, annular counter-discs (rings) of precisely controlled roughness was used for micropitting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of Mixed Lubrication Effects in Simulated Gear Tooth Contacts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a transient analysis technique for point contact elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) problems based on a formulation that couples the elastic and hydrodynamic equations.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (15)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Experimental and analytical study of gear micropitting initiation and propagation under varying loading conditions" ?

This study investigates gear micropitting initiation and propagation when subjected to varying torque loads under a constant rotational speed. The study employs both experimental gear testing and analytical evaluation based on the ISO Technical Report of Gear Micropitting, ISO/TR 15144-1:2010 and the recently revised ISO/TR 15144-1:2014. 

Surface inspection procedures, such as surface roughness measurement, replica sample and digital image analysis, and profile scanning are used on the tested pinion gear to observe the micropitting development after each cycle run at certain torque level. 

The back-to-back gear test rig is designed based on a recirculating power loop principle, which provides a desired amount of fixed torque level through the tested gears, only consuming a small amount of power to drive them. 

The torque actuator is used in the test rig to enable the torque to be applied gradually while the rig is running and to be maintained using a close electric/hydraulic loop control mechanism. 

The grinding machining process is used to finish the gear tooth flanks, with a specific geometry profile of linear tip relief and symmetrical lead crowning. 

It contributes to considerable costs due to early replacement of gears, unplanned shutdowns for carrying out maintenance procedures, such as for wind turbine gearboxes. 

This can result in loss of transmission efficiency and increase the level of vibration, which further affects the gear tooth meshing accuracy and causes extra stress concentration on the micropitting area. 

The effect of symmetrical lead crowning is ignored in the analysis because the calculation is considered only at the middle of the face width where the crowning has no effect. 

Gear tooth flank micropitting is characterised by a continuous surface deterioration, owing to various operational and loading conditions. 

Two torque levels were implemented in their tests and it was observed that the wear was lower for the shaved gears due to the effect of the lubricant film thickness. 

The cause of this is that the micropitting is initiated at the dedendum of wheel where the grinding cutting edges exist due to the tooth profile tip relief, which meshes with the addendum of pinion thus causing the progressive micropitting in the addendum area of pinion. 

By applying the variable torque levels and constant rotational speed as used in the experiment and gear parameters as given in Tables 1 and 2, the contact stresses and lubricant film thicknesses can be determined. 

Owing to the elastic deformation of loaded teeth and high sliding at tooth tips, the tip relief extensions are equal for both gears. 

The replica samples for the tooth surface of the tested pinion are produced by injecting a replication medium onto the tooth flank after each loading level. 

During gear engagement, gear teeth experience a complex combination of surface rolling and sliding contact which varies along the tooth flank [1-2], as shown in Figure 1.