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High-Speed Motion Picture Camera Experiments of Cavitation in Dynamically Loaded Journal Bearings
Author(s) -
Bo Jacobson,
B. J. Hamrock
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
journal of lubrication technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2161-9522
pISSN - 0022-2305
DOI - 10.1115/1.3254639
Subject(s) - cavitation , bearing (navigation) , eccentricity (behavior) , materials science , high speed camera , mechanics , mechanical engineering , optics , engineering , computer science , physics , artificial intelligence , political science , law
A high-speed camera was used to investigate cavitation in dynamically loaded journal bearings. The length-diameter ratio of the bearing, the speeds of the shaft and bearing, the surface material of the shaft, and the static and dynamic eccentricity of the bearing were varied. The results reveal not only the appearance of gas cavitation, but also the development of previously unsuspected vapor cavitation. It was found that gas cavitation increases with time until, after many hundreds of pressure cycles, there is a constant amount of gas kept in the cavitation zone of the bearing. The gas can have pressures of many times the atmospheric pressure. Vapor cavitation bubbles, on the other hand, collapse at pressures lower than the atmospheric pressure and cannot be transported through a high-pressure zone, nor does the amount of vapor cavitation in a bearing increase with time. Analysis is given to support the experimental findings for both gas and vapor cavitation. Previously announced in STAR as N82-20543

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