1 / 20

Kenneth Holmberg VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

REPORTING EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS IN TRIBOLOGY - SUMMARY OF THE DISCUSSION ON NEW WEAR RATE UNIT. Kenneth Holmberg VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland OECD IRG 26th Meeting, Lyon, France, 5-6.10.2006. BACKGROUND.

clio
Download Presentation

Kenneth Holmberg VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. REPORTING EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS IN TRIBOLOGY - SUMMARY OF THE DISCUSSION ON NEW WEAR RATE UNIT Kenneth Holmberg VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland OECD IRG 26th Meeting, Lyon, France, 5-6.10.2006

  2. BACKGROUND • Important role of tribology in our society: safety, reliability, energy, new products • Tribology develops and expands: number of meetings, conferences, articles submitted, published • New and more generic and precise theories: needs to be confirmed empirically • How good is our reported experimental data?

  3. BACKGROUND • Experience from writing a tribology articles and books • Many articles are today published that are never or seldom referred to - what is their contribution to our general knowledge? • In tribology we are presenting scatters of experimental results that would not be acceptable in other fields of natural science! • Two basic problems: • Specifying experimental conditions • Reporting wear

  4. 1. SPECIFYING EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS • 25th IRG OECD meeting in Uppsala, June 2005, decided to recommend a short list of parameters with which a tribological contact can be described

  5. BASIC TRIBOEMPIRIC PARAMETERS • Energy input: speed, load • Materials for body 1 and 2: • Physical / chemical / metallurgical specification • H, E, Ra • Coating: h, H, E + phys/chem/met specification • Third body: • Lubricant: η + chemical composition • Contaminants: material, size, H • Environment: • Humidity, temperature

  6. IRG OECD RECOMMENDATION OF MINIMUM SPECIFICATIONS FOR EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS IN TRIBOLOGY ARTICLES For abrasion and erosion - abrasive or erodent material, size, size distribution and shape, - speed and direction of fluid stream for erosion. Environment - lubricant: viscosity and chemical composition/specification of fluid and additives, - humidity, - temperature, - possible gases, radiation etc. Results - friction as coefficient of friction; typically the steady state value and the maximum value, - wear for both surfaces as: -- wear rate (e.g. 10^-6 mm3/N·m) and/or -- wear volume per time or per sliding distance and/or -- wear depth per time or per sliding distance, - for fatigue wear the endurance life time, - graphs of friction and wear versus time when appropriate, - surface observations of both surfaces in contact, including observations of surface layers and their extent, - observations of wear debris and when possible their average size and size distribution. Description of test device - a brief description of the test system or in case of commercially available device, its code. Geometry For both surfaces in contact: - macrogeometry: given typically as radius or diameter of a curved surface, or contact spot dimensions for flat contacts, so that stresses can be determined from loads, - microgeometry: surface roughness, given as appropriate for the application, but also as Ra-value for comparison. Energy input - load (or stress), - speed. Materials For both surfaces in contact: - material specification: metallurgical, physical or chemical; including processing method when appropriate, - any coating material, coating thickness and deposition or surface treatment method, - hardness and Young's modulus, - fracture toughness, when possible.

  7. 1. SPECIFYING EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS • 25th IRG OECD meeting in Uppsala, June 2005, decided to recommend a short list of parameters with which a tribological contact can be described • The list has been distributed to 15 tribology journals • Response positive - already in use in Tribotest and Journal of Engineering Tribology, IMechE

  8. TRIBOLOGY JOURNALS APPROACHED Wear Tribology International Tribology Transactions - STLE Tribology Lubrication Technology - STLE Journal of Engineering Tribology, Part J - IMechE   Industrial Lubrication and Tribology  Tribology Letters Tribotest Tribologia - Finnish Journal of Tribology Tribologia - Teoria i Praktyka Tribologie und Schmierungtechnik Surface and Coatings Technology Thin Solid Films Surface Engineering Trenie I Iznos

  9. 2. REPORTING WEAR • Comparison of tribological performance often done based on Friction even if Wear is more important! • Because μ is a good uniform parameter. • Wear is reported in many forms: • wear volume • wear depth • wear rate/factor/coefficient/constant…. • wear volume/time or distance or speed….. • etc

  10. WEAR PARAMETERS • We need a more uniform way to express wear. • What is that? • Czichos suggested Wear Rate ( ) where k = W / (s · F) • k = wear volume / input of energy into the contact. If hardness is included there is a loss of generality. • Sometimes we need W = wear volume, e.g. erosion • Sometimes we need h = wear depth, e.g. tolerances • Sometimes we need t = endurance life, e.g. fatigue • Do we need more wear parameters? • Should we use k, or COW similar to COF, or the Greek κsimilar toμ?

  11. REPORTING WEAR IN THE LITERATURE

  12. v Fμ Fn s1 t0 t1 Friction = a force resisting motion Wear = a process resulting in a volume of detached material Fμ = μ· Fn => μ = Fμ / Fn W = κ· Fn · s => κ = W / ( Fn· s ) • μ at a certain • moment t1 • κ at a certain time • interval t0 - t1 ~ s1 COEFFICIENT OF FRICTION AND WEAR RATE FIGURES/TRIBOLOGY/IRG Wear Rate & Friction-01-290605

  13. IRG OECD UPPSALA MEETING, 2005 • Recommendation from IRG OECD meeting with about 30 participants to introduce a new unit for wear rate: Bowden (B) equal to

  14. EXAMPLES OF WEAR RATE UNITS

  15. IRG OECD UPPSALA MEETING, 2005 • Recommendation from IRG OECD meeting with about 30 participants to introduce a new unit for wear rate: Bowden (B) equal to • Web: http://virtual.vtt.fi/virtual/proj3/irg/discussion.htm • Resulted in intensive discussion on the web with 27 contributions of which: • 13 are positive • 2 are neutral • 4 are negative • 12 come with new suggestions • The suggestions were discussed in the "Cutting edge" column in Tribology & Lubrication Technology by Tysoe and Spencer

  16. NEW SUGGESTIONS • Other unit name suggestions: Archard (Ar), WEARON (WR or WE), Tabor (Ta), Czichos (Cz) • There is a "Tabor parameter" in use to interpret the ratio of elastic deformation of two contacting bodies • The wear unit should be expressed as: 10^-6mm^3/N-m • The wear index (WI) should be used: WI = Wear volume • 10^6 GPa / (Normal load • Sliding distance) • Use WIR for rotational wear, WIL for straight-line wear, WIF for fretting wear etc • Use wear resistance Rabinowicz: 1 R = 1/B = 10^6 N·m/mm^3 = 10^-3 Pa

  17. SCEPTIC COMMENTS • Bowden not right name - he was more working on friction • Introducing a new unit is confusing - no more derived units are needed • The new unit will most likely not be adopte widely • The unit would add false validity to the Archard equation - wear rate is totally system dependent • Pascal (Pa) is N/m^2 - thus will B = 1/Pa • Fatigue, erosive and impact wear cannot use Bowden • There are >30 important variables and ~70 minor ones influencing on wear • Misleading that wear is more exact subject than it is - wear is a statistically varying entity

  18. CONTRIBUTORS TO THE DISCUSSION • Philippe Kapsa, ECL, France • Bo Jacobson, Lund Univ., Sweden • Kenneth Holmberg, VTT, Finland • Sture Hogmark, Uppsala Univ., Sweden • Ian Hutchings, Cambridge Univ., UK • Steve Shaffer, Battelle Memorial Inst., USA • Staffan Jacobson, Uppsala Univ., Sweden • Koji Kato, Sendai Univ., Japan • Brian Briscoe, Imperial Col., UK • Nic Spenser, Fed. Inst. Techn. Zurich, Switzerland • Eddy Tysoe, Univ. Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA • Ken Ludema, Univ. Michigan, USA • Michel Maillat, Lab. Dubois, Switzerland • Steven Franklin, Philips, The Netherlands • Yoshi Kimura, Japan • James Kauzlarich, Univ. Virginia, USA • Jordan Liu, Advanced Materials Technology, USA • Per Kjeldsteen, Danfoss, Denmark

  19. THREE SUGGESTIONS FOREXPRESSING WEAR: • The IRG OECD Uppsala suggestion: Wear Rate expressed with a new unit Bowden (B) equal to • The earlier " Czichos " suggestion: Wear Rate • Wear resistance Rabinowicz: 1 R = 10^6 N·m/mm^3

  20. THE END

More Related