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Simulation Study on Bearing Lubrication Mechanism and Friction Characteristics of the Biomimetic Non-Smooth Surface of a Cross-Scale, Second-Order Compound Microstructure

Yingna Liang, Cunyuan Wang, Zongyi Zhang, Zhepeng Zhang, Wei Wang, Hao Xing, Tianyuan Guan, Dianrong Gao

2023Lubricants12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The reasonable design of biomimetic non-smooth surfaces is a novel and effective way to solve problems such as the poor lubricity and serious friction and wear of friction pairs of seawater axial piston pumps. Inspired by cross-scale, second-order compound microstructures on the surfaces of some living organisms, a hydrodynamic lubrication model of a slipper pair with a surface featuring spherical pits containing spherical convex hulls was built. This study analyzed the bearing lubrication mechanism and friction characteristics of cross-scale, second-order compound microstructure from the microflow perspective via the CFD method and optimized the working and geometric parameters using a hybrid orthogonal test scheme. The study’s results show that the cross-scale, second-order compound microstructure can produce a superimposed hydrodynamic pressure effect to improve the bearing capacity of the lubrication film of a slipper pair, reducing the friction coefficient. The orders of factors (the working parameter and geometric parameters) under multiple indices (the total pressure-bearing capacity and the friction coefficient) were found. The optimal combination is a spherical pit with a first order diameter of 0.7 mm, a first order depth-to-diameter ratio of 0.1, an area rate of 20%, an arrangement angle of α/3 and a spherical convex hull with a second order diameter of 0.13 mm, and a second order depth-to-diameter ratio of 0.3. Compared to a smooth surface and a first-order, non-smooth microstructure, the cross-scale, second-order compound microstructure has an 11.0% and 8.9% higher total pressure-bearing capacity, respectively, and the friction coefficient decreased by 9.5% and 5.4%, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

LubricationMicrostructureMaterials scienceComposite materialTribologyLubricityBearing (navigation)Scale (ratio)Piston (optics)Piston ringMechanicsOpticsChemistryPhysicsRing (chemistry)WavefrontOrganic chemistryAstronomyQuantum mechanicsTribology and Lubrication EngineeringAdhesion, Friction, and Surface InteractionsLubricants and Their Additives
Simulation Study on Bearing Lubrication Mechanism and Friction Characteristics of the Biomimetic Non-Smooth Surface of a Cross-Scale, Second-Order Compound Microstructure | Litcius