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Asymptotic analysis of a lubricated heavily loaded spinning and rolling ball in a parabolic raceway
Author(s) -
Kudish Ilya I.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
lubrication science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.632
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1557-6833
pISSN - 0954-0075
DOI - 10.1002/ls.1243
Subject(s) - lubrication , spinning , lubricant , mechanics , lubrication theory , materials science , rheology , physics , composite material
In the paper, the previously developed asymptotic approach to solution of the steady isothermal problem of elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) for heavily loaded point contacts is applied to a lubricated point contact with rolling and spinning. It is shown that the whole contact region can be subdivided into three subregions. The central region can be subdivided into the Hertzian region and two adjacent boundary layers — the inlet and exit zones. The main results of the paper are threefold: (i) it is shown that in the central parts of the inlet and exit zones, the mechanisms and the equations controlling the behaviour of the lubrication contact parameters in heavily loaded point and line EHL contacts are identical, (ii) asymptotically precise formulas for the central and exit lubrication film thickness for pre‐critical and over‐critical starved and fully flooded lubrication regimes are analytically derived, and (iii) the inlet and exit zone asymptotically valid equations are uniform across all steady heavily loaded line and point EHL contacts for lubricants with the same rheology. These asymptotically valid equations were analysed and numerically solved in previously published work based on the stable methods utilising the specific regularisation approach developed for lubricated line contacts. Cases of pre‐critical and over‐critical lubrication regimes are considered. The formulas for the lubrication film thickness for pre‐critical and over‐critical starved and fully flooded lubrication regimes allow for simple analysis of the film thickness as a function of spinning angular speed, angle of the entrained lubricant and other pertinent contact characteristics. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.