Rotordynamic Evaluation of a Near-Tangential-lnjection Hybrid Bearing
Author:
Laurant Franck1, Childs Dara W.2
Affiliation:
1. SEP, Division of SNECMA, Direction Grosse Propulsion Liquide-BP 802, 27208 Vernon, Cedex, France 2. Texas A&M University, Jordan Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Turbomachinery Laboratory, College Station, TX 77840-3254
Abstract
Given the inherent DN and assembly limitations of rolling-element bearings, research is underway to develop hybrid bearings (combining hydrostatic and hydrodynamic effects) for their replacement. Hybrid bearings develop cross-coupled stiffness coefficients due to fluid rotation, leading to predictions of onset speeds of instability and potential limitations in their range of application. Injecting fluid into a bearing recess against rotation, versus the customary radial injection, can reduce the circumferential flow and the cross-coupled-stiffness coefficients, and increase the margin of stability. Test results are presented here for a hybrid bearing with against-rotation injection. The bearing has a 76.4 mm diameter with LID = 1, and CrIR = 0.001. Data are presented for 55°C water at three speeds out to 25000 rpm and three pressures out to 7.0 MPa. Compared to a radial-injection hybrid bearing, experiments show injection against rotation enhances stability, yielding reductions of cross-coupled stiffness coefficients and whirl frequency ratios. However, increased flow rate and a drop of effective stiffness with increasing speed adversely affect the bearing performance. The prediction code developed by San Andres (1995) includes angled-orifice injection. The code correctly predicts trends, but at low speed, measured cross-coupled stiffness coefficients are positive, versus a prediction of larger negative values.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Surfaces, Coatings and Films,Surfaces and Interfaces,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials
Reference20 articles.
1. Childs
D. W.
, and HaleR. K., 1994, “A Test Apparatus and Facility to Identify the Rotordynamics Coefficients of High-Speed Hydrostatic Bearings,” ASME JOURNAL OF TRIBOLOGY, Vol. 116, pp. 337–344. 2. Coleman, H. W., and Steele, W. G., 1989, Experimentation and Uncertainty Analysis for Engineers, Wiley-Interscience, New York. 3. Fayolle, P. G., and Childs, D. W., 1998, “Rotordynamic Evaluation of a Roughened-Land Hybrid Bearing,” submitted for publication in the ASME JOURNAL OF TRIBOLOGY. 4. Franchek, N. M., 1992, “Theory versus Experimental Results and Comparisons for Five Orifice-Compensated Hybrid Bearing Configurations,” M.S. thesis. Mechanical Engineering Department, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX. 5. Franchek
N. M.
, and ChildsD. W., 1994, “Experimental Test Results for Four High-Speed, High-Pressure, Orifice-Compensated Hybrid Bearings,” ASME JOURNAL OF TRIBOLOGY, Vol. 116, pp. 147–153.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|