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Wear

Wear is the damaging, gradual removal or deformation of material at solid surfaces. Causes of wear can be mechanical (e.g., erosion) or chemical (e.g., corrosion). The study of wear and related processes is referred to as tribology.

Rear (driven) bicycle sprockets. New, left, shows no wear. Right, used, shows obvious wear from being driven clockwise.

Wear in machine elements, together with other processes such as fatigue and creep, causes functional surfaces to degrade, eventually leading to material failure or loss of functionality. Thus, wear has large economic relevance as first outlined in the Jost Report.[1] Abrasive wear alone has been estimated to cost 1-4% of the gross national product of industrialized nations.[2]

Wear of metals occurs by plastic displacement of surface and near-surface material and by detachment of particles that form wear debris. The particle size may vary from millimeters to nanometers.[3] This process may occur by contact with other metals, nonmetallic solids, flowing liquids, solid particles or liquid droplets entrained in flowing gasses.[4]

The wear rate is affected by factors such as type of loading (e.g., impact, static, dynamic), type of motion (e.g., sliding, rolling), temperature, and lubrication, in particular by the process of deposition and wearing out of the boundary lubrication layer.[5] Depending on the tribosystem, different wear types and wear mechanisms can be observed.

Wear types and mechanisms

Types of wear are identified by relative motion, the nature of disturbance at the worn surface or "mechanism", and whether it effects a self regenerative or base layer.[6]

Wear mechanisms are the physical disturbance. For example, the mechanism of adhesive wear is adhesion. Wear mechanisms and/or sub-mechanisms frequently overlap and occur in a synergistic manner, producing a greater rate of wear than the sum of the individual wear mechanisms.[7]

Adhesive wear

 
SEM micrograph of adhesive wear (transferred materials) on 52100 steel sample sliding against Al alloy. (Yellow arrow indicate sliding direction)

Adhesive wear can be found between surfaces during frictional contact and generally refers to unwanted displacement and attachment of wear debris and material compounds from one surface to another.[8] Two adhesive wear types can be distinguished:[citation needed]

  1. Adhesive wear is caused by relative motion, "direct contact" and plastic deformation which create wear debris and material transfer from one surface to another.
  2. Cohesive adhesive forces, holds two surfaces together even though they are separated by a measurable distance, with or without any actual transfer of material.

Generally, adhesive wear occurs when two bodies slide over or are pressed into each other, which promote material transfer. This can be described as plastic deformation of very small fragments within the surface layers.[citation needed] The asperities or microscopic high points (surface roughness) found on each surface affect the severity of how fragments of oxides are pulled off and added to the other surface, partly due to strong adhesive forces between atoms,[9] but also due to accumulation of energy in the plastic zone between the asperities during relative motion.

The type of mechanism and the amplitude of surface attraction varies between different materials but are amplified by an increase in the density of "surface energy". Most solids will adhere on contact to some extent. However, oxidation films, lubricants and contaminants naturally occurring generally suppress adhesion,[10] and spontaneous exothermic chemical reactions between surfaces generally produce a substance with low energy status in the absorbed species.[11]

Adhesive wear can lead to an increase in roughness and the creation of protrusions (i.e., lumps) above the original surface. In industrial manufacturing, this is referred to as galling, which eventually breaches the oxidized surface layer and connects to the underlying bulk material, enhancing the possibility for a stronger adhesion[11] and plastic flow around the lump.

A simple model for the wear volume for adhesive wear,  , can be described by:[12][13]

 

where   is the load,   is the wear coefficient,   is the sliding distance, and   is the hardness.

Abrasive wear

 
Deep 'groove' like surface indicates abrasive wear over cast iron (yellow arrow indicate sliding direction)

Abrasive wear occurs when a hard rough surface slides across a softer surface.[9] ASTM International defines it as the loss of material due to hard particles or hard protuberances that are forced against and move along a solid surface.[14]

Abrasive wear is commonly classified according to the type of contact and the contact environment.[15] The type of contact determines the mode of abrasive wear. The two modes of abrasive wear are known as two-body and three-body abrasive wear. Two-body wear occurs when the grits or hard particles remove material from the opposite surface. The common analogy is that of material being removed or displaced by a cutting or plowing operation. Three-body wear occurs when the particles are not constrained, and are free to roll and slide down a surface. The contact environment determines whether the wear is classified as open or closed. An open contact environment occurs when the surfaces are sufficiently displaced to be independent of one another

There are a number of factors which influence abrasive wear and hence the manner of material removal. Several different mechanisms have been proposed to describe the manner in which the material is removed. Three commonly identified mechanisms of abrasive wear are:[citation needed]

  1. Plowing
  2. Cutting
  3. Fragmentation

Plowing occurs when material is displaced to the side, away from the wear particles, resulting in the formation of grooves that do not involve direct material removal. The displaced material forms ridges adjacent to grooves, which may be removed by subsequent passage of abrasive particles.

Cutting occurs when material is separated from the surface in the form of primary debris, or microchips, with little or no material displaced to the sides of the grooves. This mechanism closely resembles conventional machining.

Fragmentation occurs when material is separated from a surface by a cutting process and the indenting abrasive causes localized fracture of the wear material. These cracks then freely propagate locally around the wear groove, resulting in additional material removal by spalling.[15]

Abrasive wear can be measured as loss of mass by the Taber Abrasion Test according to ISO 9352 or ASTM D 4060.

The wear volume for single-abrasive wear,  , can be described by:[13]

 

where   is the load,   is the shape factor of an asperity (typically ~ 0.1),   is the degrees of wear by an asperity (typically 0.1 to 1.0),   is the wear coefficient,   is the sliding distance, and   is the hardness.

Surface fatigue

Surface fatigue is a process in which the surface of a material is weakened by cyclic loading, which is one type of general material fatigue. Fatigue wear is produced when the wear particles are detached by cyclic crack growth of microcracks on the surface. These microcracks are either superficial cracks or subsurface cracks.

Fretting wear

Fretting wear is the repeated cyclical rubbing between two surfaces. Over a period of time fretting which will remove material from one or both surfaces in contact. It occurs typically in bearings, although most bearings have their surfaces hardened to resist the problem. Another problem occurs when cracks in either surface are created, known as fretting fatigue. It is the more serious of the two phenomena because it can lead to catastrophic failure of the bearing. An associated problem occurs when the small particles removed by wear are oxidized in air. The oxides are usually harder than the underlying metal, so wear accelerates as the harder particles abrade the metal surfaces further. Fretting corrosion acts in the same way, especially when water is present. Unprotected bearings on large structures like bridges can suffer serious degradation in behaviour, especially when salt is used the during winter to deice the highways carried by the bridges. The problem of fretting corrosion was involved in the Silver Bridge tragedy and the Mianus River Bridge accident.

Erosive wear

Erosive wear can be defined as an extremely short sliding motion and is executed within a short time interval. Erosive wear is caused by the impact of particles of solid or liquid against the surface of an object.[10][16] The impacting particles gradually remove material from the surface through repeated deformations and cutting actions.[17] It is a widely encountered mechanism in industry. Due to the nature of the conveying process, piping systems are prone to wear when abrasive particles have to be transported.[18]

The rate of erosive wear is dependent upon a number of factors. The material characteristics of the particles, such as their shape, hardness, impact velocity and impingement angle are primary factors along with the properties of the surface being eroded. The impingement angle is one of the most important factors and is widely recognized in literature.[19] For ductile materials, the maximum wear rate is found when the impingement angle is approximately 30°, whilst for non-ductile materials the maximum wear rate occurs when the impingement angle is normal to the surface.[19] A detailed theoretical analysis of dependency of the erosive wear on the inclination angle and material properties is provided in.[20]

For a given particle morphology, the erosion rate,  , can be fit with a power law dependence on velocity:[16]

 

where   is a constant,   is velocity, and   is a velocity exponent.   is typically between 2 - 2.5 for metals and 2.5 - 3 for ceramics.

Corrosion and oxidation wear

Corrosion and oxidation wear occurs both in lubricated and dry contacts. The fundamental cause are chemical reactions between the worn material and the corroding medium.[21] Wear caused by a synergistic action of tribological stresses and corrosion is also called tribocorrosion.

Other Types of Wear

Other, less common types of wear are impact, cavitation, and diffusive wear.[6]

Wear stages

Under nominal operation conditions, the wear rate normally changes in three different stages:[citation needed]

  • Primary stage or early run-in period, where surfaces adapt to each other and the wear-rate might vary between high and low.
  • Secondary stage or mid-age process, where steady wear can be observed. Most of the component's operational life is spent in this stage.
  • Tertiary stage or old-age period, where surfaces are subjected to rapid failure due to a high rate of wear.

Note that the wear rate is strongly influenced by the operating conditions and the formation of tribofilms. The secondary stage is shortened with increasing severity of environmental conditions, such as high temperatures, strain rates and stresses.

So-called wear maps, demonstrating wear rate under different operation condition, are used to determine stable operation points for tribological contacts. Wear maps also show dominating wear modes under different loading conditions.[citation needed]

In explicit wear tests simulating industrial conditions between metallic surfaces, there are no clear chronological distinction between different wear-stages due to big overlaps and symbiotic relations between various friction mechanisms. Surface engineering and treatments are used to minimize wear and extend the components working life.[1][22]

Wear testing

Several standard test methods exist for different types of wear to determine the amount of material removal during a specified time period under well-defined conditions. ASTM International Committee G-2 standardizes wear testing for specific applications, which are periodically updated. The Society for Tribology and Lubrication Engineers (STLE) has documented a large number of frictional, wear and lubrication tests. Standardized wear tests are used to create comparative material rankings for a specific set of test parameter as stipulated in the test description. To obtain more accurate predictions of wear in industrial applications it is necessary to conduct wear testing under conditions simulating the exact wear process.

An attrition test is a test that is carried out to measure the resistance of a granular material to wear.

Modeling of wear

The Reye–Archard–Khrushchov wear law is the classic wear prediction model.[23]

Measuring wear

Wear coefficient

The wear coefficient is a physical coefficient used to measure, characterize and correlate the wear of materials.

Lubricant analysis

Lubricant analysis is an alternative, indirect way of measuring wear. Here, wear is detected by the presence of wear particles in a liquid lubricant. To gain further insights into the nature of the particles, chemical (such as XRF, ICP-OES), structural (such as ferrography) or optical analysis (such as light microscopy) can be performed.[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Chattopadhyay, R. (2001). Surface Wear - Analysis, Treatment, and Prevention. OH, USA: ASM-International. ISBN 978-0-87170-702-4.
  2. ^ Davis, J. R. (2001). Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance. ASM International. p. 56. ISBN 0-87170-700-4. OCLC 1027005806.
  3. ^ Akchurin, Aydar; Bosman, Rob; Lugt, Piet M.; Drogen, Mark van (2016-06-16). "Analysis of Wear Particles Formed in Boundary-Lubricated Sliding Contacts". Tribology Letters. 63 (2): 16. doi:10.1007/s11249-016-0701-z. ISSN 1023-8883.
  4. ^ Davis, J.R., ed. (1998). Metals Handbook: Desk Edition. ASM International. ISBN 9780871706546.
  5. ^ Popov, Valentin L. (2018). "Is Tribology Approaching Its Golden Age? Grand Challenges in Engineering Education and Tribological Research". Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering. 4. doi:10.3389/fmech.2018.00016.
  6. ^ a b Varenberg, M. (2013). "Towards a unified classification of wear". Friction. 1 (4): 333–340. doi:10.1007/s40544-013-0027-x.
  7. ^ Williams, J. A. (2005). "Wear and wear particles - Some fundamentals." Tribology International 38(10): 863-870
  8. ^ "Wear - About Tribology".
  9. ^ a b Rabinowicz, E. (1995). Friction and Wear of Materials. New York, John Wiley and Sons.
  10. ^ a b Stachowiak, G. W., and A. W. Batchelor (2005). Engineering Tribology. Burlington, Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann
  11. ^ a b Glaeser, W. A., Ed. (1993).
  12. ^ Davis, Joseph R. (2001). Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance. Materials Park, OH: ASM International. pp. 72–75. ISBN 978-0-87170-700-0. OCLC 69243337.
  13. ^ a b Stachowiak, Gwidon (2006). "2.2.2 Wear Modes: Abrasive, Adhesive, Flow and Fatigue Wear". Wear- Materials, Mechanism and Practice. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 11–14. ISBN 978-0-470-01628-2.
  14. ^ Standard Terminology Relating to Wear and Erosion, Annual Book of Standards, Vol 03.02, ASTM, 1987, p 243-250
  15. ^ a b ASM Handbook Committee (2002). ASM Handbook. Friction, Lubrication and Wear Technology. U.S.A., ASM International. Volume 18.
  16. ^ a b Davis, J. R. (2001). Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance. ASM International. pp. 61–67. ISBN 0-87170-700-4. OCLC 1027005806.
  17. ^ Mamata, K. P. (2008). "A review on silt erosion in hydro turbines." Renewable & sustainable energy reviews 12(7): 1974.
  18. ^ CAR, Duarte; FJ, de Souza; VF, dos Santos (January 2016). "Mitigating elbow erosion with a vortex chamber". Powder Technology. 288: 6–25. doi:10.1016/j.powtec.2015.10.032.
  19. ^ a b Sinmazcelik, T. and I. Taskiran (2007). "Erosive wear behaviour of polyphenylenesulphide (PPS) composites." Materials in engineering 28(9): 2471-2477.
  20. ^ Willert, Emanuel (2020). Stoßprobleme in Physik, Technik und Medizin: Grundlagen und Anwendungen (in German). Springer Vieweg.
  21. ^ Stachwaik, Gwidon W.; Batchelor, Andrew W. (2005). Engineering tribology (3rd ed.). Elsevier Inc. Bibcode:2005entr.book.....W.
  22. ^ Chattopadhyay, R. (2004). Advanced Thermally Assisted Surface Engineering Processes. MA, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4020-7696-1.
  23. ^ Bisson, Edmond E. (1968). Various Modes of Wear and their Controlling Factors. NASA Technical Memorendum TM X-52426.
  24. ^ "Lubrication theory in oil analysis| Learn Oil Analysis". learnoilanalysis.com. Retrieved 2017-11-30.

Further reading

  • Bowden, Tabor: Friction and Lubrication of Solids (Oxford:Clarendon Press 1950).
  • Kleis I. and Kulu P.: Solid Particle Erosion. Springer-Verlag, London, 2008, 206 pp.
  • Zum Gahr K.-H.: Microstructure and wear of materials, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1987, 560 pp.
  • Jones J. R.:Lubrication, Friction, and Wear, NASA-SP-8063, 1971, 75 pp. A nice, free and good document available here.
  • S. C. Lim. Recent Development in Wear Mechanism Maps. Trib. Intl. 1998; 31; 87–97.
  • H.C. Meng and K. C Ludema. Wear 1995; 183; 443–457.
  • R. Bosman and D. J. Schipper. Wear 2012; 280; 54–62.
  • M. W. Akram, K. Polychronopoulou, A. A. Polycarpou. Trib. Int.: 2013; 57;9 2–100.
  • P. J. Blau, Tribosystem Analysis - A Practical Approach to the Diagnosis of Wear Problems. CRC Press, 2016.

External links

  • University of Miskolc: Wear and wear mechanism

wear, other, uses, disambiguation, worn, redirects, here, painting, vincent, gogh, eternity, gate, damaging, gradual, removal, deformation, material, solid, surfaces, causes, wear, mechanical, erosion, chemical, corrosion, study, wear, related, processes, refe. For other uses see Wear disambiguation Worn out redirects here For the painting by Vincent van Gogh see At Eternity s Gate Wear is the damaging gradual removal or deformation of material at solid surfaces Causes of wear can be mechanical e g erosion or chemical e g corrosion The study of wear and related processes is referred to as tribology Rear driven bicycle sprockets New left shows no wear Right used shows obvious wear from being driven clockwise Wear in machine elements together with other processes such as fatigue and creep causes functional surfaces to degrade eventually leading to material failure or loss of functionality Thus wear has large economic relevance as first outlined in the Jost Report 1 Abrasive wear alone has been estimated to cost 1 4 of the gross national product of industrialized nations 2 Wear of metals occurs by plastic displacement of surface and near surface material and by detachment of particles that form wear debris The particle size may vary from millimeters to nanometers 3 This process may occur by contact with other metals nonmetallic solids flowing liquids solid particles or liquid droplets entrained in flowing gasses 4 The wear rate is affected by factors such as type of loading e g impact static dynamic type of motion e g sliding rolling temperature and lubrication in particular by the process of deposition and wearing out of the boundary lubrication layer 5 Depending on the tribosystem different wear types and wear mechanisms can be observed Contents 1 Wear types and mechanisms 1 1 Adhesive wear 1 2 Abrasive wear 1 3 Surface fatigue 1 4 Fretting wear 1 5 Erosive wear 1 6 Corrosion and oxidation wear 1 7 Other Types of Wear 2 Wear stages 3 Wear testing 4 Modeling of wear 5 Measuring wear 5 1 Wear coefficient 5 2 Lubricant analysis 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksWear types and mechanisms EditTypes of wear are identified by relative motion the nature of disturbance at the worn surface or mechanism and whether it effects a self regenerative or base layer 6 Wear mechanisms are the physical disturbance For example the mechanism of adhesive wear is adhesion Wear mechanisms and or sub mechanisms frequently overlap and occur in a synergistic manner producing a greater rate of wear than the sum of the individual wear mechanisms 7 Adhesive wear Edit SEM micrograph of adhesive wear transferred materials on 52100 steel sample sliding against Al alloy Yellow arrow indicate sliding direction Adhesive wear can be found between surfaces during frictional contact and generally refers to unwanted displacement and attachment of wear debris and material compounds from one surface to another 8 Two adhesive wear types can be distinguished citation needed Adhesive wear is caused by relative motion direct contact and plastic deformation which create wear debris and material transfer from one surface to another Cohesive adhesive forces holds two surfaces together even though they are separated by a measurable distance with or without any actual transfer of material Generally adhesive wear occurs when two bodies slide over or are pressed into each other which promote material transfer This can be described as plastic deformation of very small fragments within the surface layers citation needed The asperities or microscopic high points surface roughness found on each surface affect the severity of how fragments of oxides are pulled off and added to the other surface partly due to strong adhesive forces between atoms 9 but also due to accumulation of energy in the plastic zone between the asperities during relative motion The type of mechanism and the amplitude of surface attraction varies between different materials but are amplified by an increase in the density of surface energy Most solids will adhere on contact to some extent However oxidation films lubricants and contaminants naturally occurring generally suppress adhesion 10 and spontaneous exothermic chemical reactions between surfaces generally produce a substance with low energy status in the absorbed species 11 Adhesive wear can lead to an increase in roughness and the creation of protrusions i e lumps above the original surface In industrial manufacturing this is referred to as galling which eventually breaches the oxidized surface layer and connects to the underlying bulk material enhancing the possibility for a stronger adhesion 11 and plastic flow around the lump A simple model for the wear volume for adhesive wear V displaystyle V can be described by 12 13 V K W L H v displaystyle V K frac WL H v where W displaystyle W is the load K displaystyle K is the wear coefficient L displaystyle L is the sliding distance and H v displaystyle H v is the hardness Abrasive wear Edit Deep groove like surface indicates abrasive wear over cast iron yellow arrow indicate sliding direction Abrasive wear occurs when a hard rough surface slides across a softer surface 9 ASTM International defines it as the loss of material due to hard particles or hard protuberances that are forced against and move along a solid surface 14 Abrasive wear is commonly classified according to the type of contact and the contact environment 15 The type of contact determines the mode of abrasive wear The two modes of abrasive wear are known as two body and three body abrasive wear Two body wear occurs when the grits or hard particles remove material from the opposite surface The common analogy is that of material being removed or displaced by a cutting or plowing operation Three body wear occurs when the particles are not constrained and are free to roll and slide down a surface The contact environment determines whether the wear is classified as open or closed An open contact environment occurs when the surfaces are sufficiently displaced to be independent of one anotherThere are a number of factors which influence abrasive wear and hence the manner of material removal Several different mechanisms have been proposed to describe the manner in which the material is removed Three commonly identified mechanisms of abrasive wear are citation needed Plowing Cutting FragmentationPlowing occurs when material is displaced to the side away from the wear particles resulting in the formation of grooves that do not involve direct material removal The displaced material forms ridges adjacent to grooves which may be removed by subsequent passage of abrasive particles Cutting occurs when material is separated from the surface in the form of primary debris or microchips with little or no material displaced to the sides of the grooves This mechanism closely resembles conventional machining Fragmentation occurs when material is separated from a surface by a cutting process and the indenting abrasive causes localized fracture of the wear material These cracks then freely propagate locally around the wear groove resulting in additional material removal by spalling 15 Abrasive wear can be measured as loss of mass by the Taber Abrasion Test according to ISO 9352 or ASTM D 4060 The wear volume for single abrasive wear V displaystyle V can be described by 13 V a b W L H v K W L H v displaystyle V alpha beta frac WL H v K frac WL H v where W displaystyle W is the load a displaystyle alpha is the shape factor of an asperity typically 0 1 b displaystyle beta is the degrees of wear by an asperity typically 0 1 to 1 0 K displaystyle K is the wear coefficient L displaystyle L is the sliding distance and H v displaystyle H v is the hardness Surface fatigue Edit Main article Fatigue material Surface fatigue is a process in which the surface of a material is weakened by cyclic loading which is one type of general material fatigue Fatigue wear is produced when the wear particles are detached by cyclic crack growth of microcracks on the surface These microcracks are either superficial cracks or subsurface cracks Fretting wear Edit Main article Fretting Fretting wear is the repeated cyclical rubbing between two surfaces Over a period of time fretting which will remove material from one or both surfaces in contact It occurs typically in bearings although most bearings have their surfaces hardened to resist the problem Another problem occurs when cracks in either surface are created known as fretting fatigue It is the more serious of the two phenomena because it can lead to catastrophic failure of the bearing An associated problem occurs when the small particles removed by wear are oxidized in air The oxides are usually harder than the underlying metal so wear accelerates as the harder particles abrade the metal surfaces further Fretting corrosion acts in the same way especially when water is present Unprotected bearings on large structures like bridges can suffer serious degradation in behaviour especially when salt is used the during winter to deice the highways carried by the bridges The problem of fretting corrosion was involved in the Silver Bridge tragedy and the Mianus River Bridge accident Erosive wear Edit See also Water droplet erosion Erosive wear can be defined as an extremely short sliding motion and is executed within a short time interval Erosive wear is caused by the impact of particles of solid or liquid against the surface of an object 10 16 The impacting particles gradually remove material from the surface through repeated deformations and cutting actions 17 It is a widely encountered mechanism in industry Due to the nature of the conveying process piping systems are prone to wear when abrasive particles have to be transported 18 The rate of erosive wear is dependent upon a number of factors The material characteristics of the particles such as their shape hardness impact velocity and impingement angle are primary factors along with the properties of the surface being eroded The impingement angle is one of the most important factors and is widely recognized in literature 19 For ductile materials the maximum wear rate is found when the impingement angle is approximately 30 whilst for non ductile materials the maximum wear rate occurs when the impingement angle is normal to the surface 19 A detailed theoretical analysis of dependency of the erosive wear on the inclination angle and material properties is provided in 20 For a given particle morphology the erosion rate E displaystyle E can be fit with a power law dependence on velocity 16 E k v n displaystyle E kv n where k displaystyle k is a constant v displaystyle v is velocity and n displaystyle n is a velocity exponent n displaystyle n is typically between 2 2 5 for metals and 2 5 3 for ceramics Corrosion and oxidation wear Edit Corrosion and oxidation wear occurs both in lubricated and dry contacts The fundamental cause are chemical reactions between the worn material and the corroding medium 21 Wear caused by a synergistic action of tribological stresses and corrosion is also called tribocorrosion Other Types of Wear Edit Other less common types of wear are impact cavitation and diffusive wear 6 Wear stages EditUnder nominal operation conditions the wear rate normally changes in three different stages citation needed Primary stage or early run in period where surfaces adapt to each other and the wear rate might vary between high and low Secondary stage or mid age process where steady wear can be observed Most of the component s operational life is spent in this stage Tertiary stage or old age period where surfaces are subjected to rapid failure due to a high rate of wear Note that the wear rate is strongly influenced by the operating conditions and the formation of tribofilms The secondary stage is shortened with increasing severity of environmental conditions such as high temperatures strain rates and stresses So called wear maps demonstrating wear rate under different operation condition are used to determine stable operation points for tribological contacts Wear maps also show dominating wear modes under different loading conditions citation needed In explicit wear tests simulating industrial conditions between metallic surfaces there are no clear chronological distinction between different wear stages due to big overlaps and symbiotic relations between various friction mechanisms Surface engineering and treatments are used to minimize wear and extend the components working life 1 22 Wear testing EditSeveral standard test methods exist for different types of wear to determine the amount of material removal during a specified time period under well defined conditions ASTM International Committee G 2 standardizes wear testing for specific applications which are periodically updated The Society for Tribology and Lubrication Engineers STLE has documented a large number of frictional wear and lubrication tests Standardized wear tests are used to create comparative material rankings for a specific set of test parameter as stipulated in the test description To obtain more accurate predictions of wear in industrial applications it is necessary to conduct wear testing under conditions simulating the exact wear process An attrition test is a test that is carried out to measure the resistance of a granular material to wear Modeling of wear EditThe Reye Archard Khrushchov wear law is the classic wear prediction model 23 Measuring wear EditWear coefficient Edit Main article Wear coefficient The wear coefficient is a physical coefficient used to measure characterize and correlate the wear of materials Lubricant analysis Edit Lubricant analysis is an alternative indirect way of measuring wear Here wear is detected by the presence of wear particles in a liquid lubricant To gain further insights into the nature of the particles chemical such as XRF ICP OES structural such as ferrography or optical analysis such as light microscopy can be performed 24 See also EditAbrasion mechanical Process of wearing down a surface Backlash engineering Clearance between mating components Hysteresis Dependence of the state of a system on its history Tribometer Instrument that measures friction and wear between surfaces Equipment used to measure friction and wear Concrete degradation Damage to concrete affecting its mechanical strength and its durability Wear coefficient coefficient used in physics for mesuring matterial wearingPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Archard equation Model used to describe wear Reye s hypothesis it References Edit a b Chattopadhyay R 2001 Surface Wear Analysis Treatment and Prevention OH USA ASM International ISBN 978 0 87170 702 4 Davis J R 2001 Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance ASM International p 56 ISBN 0 87170 700 4 OCLC 1027005806 Akchurin Aydar Bosman Rob Lugt Piet M Drogen Mark van 2016 06 16 Analysis of Wear Particles Formed in Boundary Lubricated Sliding Contacts Tribology Letters 63 2 16 doi 10 1007 s11249 016 0701 z ISSN 1023 8883 Davis J R ed 1998 Metals Handbook Desk Edition ASM International ISBN 9780871706546 Popov Valentin L 2018 Is Tribology Approaching Its Golden Age Grand Challenges in Engineering Education and Tribological Research Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering 4 doi 10 3389 fmech 2018 00016 a b Varenberg M 2013 Towards a unified classification of wear Friction 1 4 333 340 doi 10 1007 s40544 013 0027 x Williams J A 2005 Wear and wear particles Some fundamentals Tribology International 38 10 863 870 Wear About Tribology a b Rabinowicz E 1995 Friction and Wear of Materials New York John Wiley and Sons a b Stachowiak G W and A W Batchelor 2005 Engineering Tribology Burlington Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann a b Glaeser W A Ed 1993 Davis Joseph R 2001 Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance Materials Park OH ASM International pp 72 75 ISBN 978 0 87170 700 0 OCLC 69243337 a b Stachowiak Gwidon 2006 2 2 2 Wear Modes Abrasive Adhesive Flow and Fatigue Wear Wear Materials Mechanism and Practice John Wiley amp Sons pp 11 14 ISBN 978 0 470 01628 2 Standard Terminology Relating to Wear and Erosion Annual Book of Standards Vol 03 02 ASTM 1987 p 243 250 a b ASM Handbook Committee 2002 ASM Handbook Friction Lubrication and Wear Technology U S A ASM International Volume 18 a b Davis J R 2001 Surface engineering for corrosion and wear resistance ASM International pp 61 67 ISBN 0 87170 700 4 OCLC 1027005806 Mamata K P 2008 A review on silt erosion in hydro turbines Renewable amp sustainable energy reviews 12 7 1974 CAR Duarte FJ de Souza VF dos Santos January 2016 Mitigating elbow erosion with a vortex chamber Powder Technology 288 6 25 doi 10 1016 j powtec 2015 10 032 a b Sinmazcelik T and I Taskiran 2007 Erosive wear behaviour of polyphenylenesulphide PPS composites Materials in engineering 28 9 2471 2477 Willert Emanuel 2020 Stossprobleme in Physik Technik und Medizin Grundlagen und Anwendungen in German Springer Vieweg Stachwaik Gwidon W Batchelor Andrew W 2005 Engineering tribology 3rd ed Elsevier Inc Bibcode 2005entr book W Chattopadhyay R 2004 Advanced Thermally Assisted Surface Engineering Processes MA USA Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 978 1 4020 7696 1 Bisson Edmond E 1968 Various Modes of Wear and their Controlling Factors NASA Technical Memorendum TM X 52426 Lubrication theory in oil analysis Learn Oil Analysis learnoilanalysis com Retrieved 2017 11 30 Further reading EditBowden Tabor Friction and Lubrication of Solids Oxford Clarendon Press 1950 Kleis I and Kulu P Solid Particle Erosion Springer Verlag London 2008 206 pp Zum Gahr K H Microstructure and wear of materials Elsevier Amsterdam 1987 560 pp Jones J R Lubrication Friction and Wear NASA SP 8063 1971 75 pp A nice free and good document available here S C Lim Recent Development in Wear Mechanism Maps Trib Intl 1998 31 87 97 H C Meng and K C Ludema Wear 1995 183 443 457 R Bosman and D J Schipper Wear 2012 280 54 62 M W Akram K Polychronopoulou A A Polycarpou Trib Int 2013 57 9 2 100 P J Blau Tribosystem Analysis A Practical Approach to the Diagnosis of Wear Problems CRC Press 2016 External links EditUniversity of Miskolc Wear and wear mechanism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wear amp oldid 1140696018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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