• Title/Summary/Keyword: 일정 크랭크-축 각속도

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Wear Analysis of Engine Bearings at Constant Shaft Angular Speed on a Firing State - Part I: Understanding of Bearing Wear Region (파이어링 상태의 일정 축 각속도에서 엔진 베어링의 마모 해석 - Part I: 베어링 마모발생 부위 파악)

  • Chun, Sang Myung
    • Tribology and Lubricants
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.93-107
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    • 2018
  • The purpose of Part I of this study is to find the potential region of wear scarring on engine journal bearings operating at a constant angular crank shaft velocity under firing conditions. To do this, we calculate the applied loads and eccentricities of a big-end journal bearing installed on a four-stroke and four-cylinder engine at every crank angle. Then, we find potential wear regions, such as a minimum oil film thickness, at every crank angle below most oil film thickness scarring wear (MOFTSW) obtained based on the concept of the centerline average surface roughness. Thus, the wear region is defined as a set of each film thickness below the MOFTSW at every crank angle. In this region, the wear volume changes according to the wear depth and wear angle, depending on the minimum oil film thickness at every crank angle. The total wear volume is the summation during one cycle. Graphical views of the region in the two-dimensional coordinates show the crank angle and bearing angle along the journal center path, indicating the position of the minimum oil film thickness. The results of wear analysis show that the possible wear region is located at a few tens of angles behind the upper center of a big-end bearing at maximum power rpm.

Wear Analysis of Engine Bearings at Constant Shaft Angular Speed during Firing State - Part II: Calculation of the Wear on Journal Bearings (파이어링 상태의 일정 축 각속도에서 엔진베어링의 마모 해석 - Part II: 저어널베어링 마모 계산)

  • Chun, Sang Myung
    • Tribology and Lubricants
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.146-159
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    • 2018
  • This paper presents a wear analysis procedure for calculating the wear of journal bearings of a four-strokes and four-cylinder engine operating at a constant angular crank shaft speed during firing conditions. To decide whether the lubrication state of a journal bearing is in the possible region of wear scar, we utilize the concept of the centerline average surface roughness to define the most oil film thickness scarring wear (MOFTSW) on two rough surfaces. The wear volume is calculated from the wear depth and wear angle, determined by the magnitude of each film thickness on a set of oil films with thicknesses lower than the MOFTSW at every crank angle. To calculate the wear volume at one contact, the wear range ratio during one cycle is used. The total wear volume is then determined by accumulating the wear volume at every contact. The fractional film defect coefficient, asperity load sharing factor, and modified specific wear rate for the application of the mixed-elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication regime are used. The results of this study show that wear occurs only at the connecting-rod big-end bearing. Thus, simulation results of only the big-end bearing are illustrated and analyzed. It is shown that the wear volume of each wear scar group occurs consecutively as the crank angle changes, resulting in the total accumulated wear volume.