Investigation of Failure Mechanisms in Oil-Lubricated Rolling Bearings under Small Oscillating Movements: Experimental Results, Analysis and Comparison with Theoretical Models

Halmos F, Wartzack S, Bartz M (2024)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2024

Journal

Book Volume: 12

Pages Range: 271

Issue: 8

DOI: 10.3390/lubricants12080271

Abstract

Bearing life calculation is a well-researched and standardized topic for rotating operation conditions. However, there is still no validated and standardized calculation for oscillating operation, only different calculation approaches. Due to the increasing number of oscillating rolling bearings, for example, in wind turbines, industrial robots, or 3D printers, it is becoming more and more important to validate one of these approaches or to formulate a new one. In order to achieve this goal, the damage mechanisms for oscillating operating conditions must first be analyzed in more detail by means of experimental investigations. The open question is whether fatigue is the relevant damage mechanism or whether wear damage, such as fretting corrosion or false brinelling, dominates. The present work therefore shows under which oscillation angle and frequency fatigue occur in oil-lubricated cylindrical roller bearings.

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How to cite

APA:

Halmos, F., Wartzack, S., & Bartz, M. (2024). Investigation of Failure Mechanisms in Oil-Lubricated Rolling Bearings under Small Oscillating Movements: Experimental Results, Analysis and Comparison with Theoretical Models. Lubricants, 12, 271. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants12080271

MLA:

Halmos, Fabian, Sandro Wartzack, and Marcel Bartz. "Investigation of Failure Mechanisms in Oil-Lubricated Rolling Bearings under Small Oscillating Movements: Experimental Results, Analysis and Comparison with Theoretical Models." Lubricants 12 (2024): 271.

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