Application of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper to Determining Its Operating Temperature in a Steady State
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Engine designs;
- Types of ignition;
- Power supply and cooling system designs;
- Piston and crank systems;
- Materials used in the production of engine parts;
- General methodology of designing selected engine parts, etc.
2. Torsional Vibrations of the Crankshaft and Methods of Their Elimination
- Change of rotational speeds of the engine (change of the operating speed range of the engine);
- Change of the natural frequency of vibrations of the entire system;
- Change in the course of exciting forces;
- Use of vibration dampers.
- Create a substitute vibrating model of an actual drive system (Figure 6);
- Determine the course of the tangential forces FT as a function of the shaft rotation angle φ and carry out their harmonic analysis, if the data were not supplied by the engine manufacturer;
- Determine the basic geometrical parameters of the damper;
- Calculate the mass moment of inertia of the inertia ring and the damper housing;
- Determines the size of clearances in the damper;
- Determine the viscosity of the damping fluid;
- Calculate the amplitude of resonant vibrations of the free end of the shaft with and without a damper and check the damper thermally in the end phase.
3. The Concept of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Torsional Vibration Damper
- The value describing the intensity of heat flow through the damper housing to the environment is the heat transfer coefficient α (W/m2 °C) (in the first stage of calculations it was assumed that α = const [18]);
- The model presented in Figure 12 is described by equations taking into account:
- Geometric parameters (height) of the oil film h as a function of relative eccentricity ε:
- CR = 0.5 (D − DJ)—radial clearance between housing and ring;
- D—internal diameter of the housing;
- DJ—outer diameter of the ring;
- φ—angular coordinate;
- β—inclination angle of the center line of the inertia ring and the housing;
- e—ring and housing position eccentricity;
- ε—relative eccentricity.
- Pressure distribution in the damper oil film (the equation was derived from the Navier–Stokes equations):
- p—oil film pressure;
- η(T)—dynamic viscosity of the oil;
- T—oil temperature;
- ωw = ω2 − ω1—relative angular velocity.
- Damper housing temperature TB:
- T0—T0—ambient temperature;
- ff—fluid friction coefficient;
- F—ring weight;
- α—heat transfer coefficient;
- B0—width of the housing;
- Thermophysical properties of silicone oil M30000 taking into account viscosity changes as a function of temperature according to Clearco Products Co., Inc. (Willow Grove, PA, USA).
- —kinematic viscosity;
- ρ(T)—oil density.
4. Calculation of the Working Temperature of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper
5. Analysis of Research Results and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
D = 2R | internal diameter of the housing (m) |
DJ = 2RJ | outer inertia ring diameter (m) |
CR = R − RJ | radial clearance (m) |
B0 | width of the housing (m) |
Bp | width of the inertia ring (m) |
h | oil film height (m) |
hmin | minimum oil film height (m)) |
x = j × R, y, z | Cartesian coordinate system |
φ | angular coordinate (rad) |
ω1 | angular velocity of the inertia ring (rad/s) |
ω2 | angular velocity of the housing (rad/s) |
ωw = ω2 − ω1 | relative angular velocity of the housing and inertia ring (rad/s) |
O | center position of the housing |
OJ | center position of the ring |
F | inertia ring weight (N) |
FL | hydrodynamic buoyancy force (N) |
e = | ring and housing position eccentricity (m) |
ε = e/CR | relative eccentricity (–) |
β | angle of the center line of the inertia ring (OJ) and the housing (O) (rad) |
p | oil film pressure (N/m2) |
T | oil temperature (°C) |
T0 | ambient temperature (°C) |
TB | damper housing temperature (°C) |
η(T) | dynamic viscosity of the oil (Pas) |
ρ(T) | oil density (kg/m3) |
α(T) | heat transfer coefficient (W/m2 °C) |
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Geometric, Physical and Kinematic Parameters. | |
---|---|
1. Outer diameter of the ring | DJ = 2RJ = 207.925 mm |
2. Internal diameter of the housing | D = 2R = 208.109 mm |
3. Radial clearance | CR = R − Rj = 0.092 mm |
4. Inertia ring width | Bp = 33.00 mm |
5. Inertia ring weight | F = 89.6 N |
6. Relative angular velocity | ωw = ω2 − ω1 = 0.4–2.0 1/s |
7. Kinematic viscosity of silicone oil | ν = 30,000 cSt |
8. Oil density | ρ = 970 kg/m3 |
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Homik, W.; Mazurkow, A.; Woś, P. Application of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper to Determining Its Operating Temperature in a Steady State. Materials 2021, 14, 5234. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14185234
Homik W, Mazurkow A, Woś P. Application of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper to Determining Its Operating Temperature in a Steady State. Materials. 2021; 14(18):5234. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14185234
Chicago/Turabian StyleHomik, Wojciech, Aleksander Mazurkow, and Paweł Woś. 2021. "Application of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper to Determining Its Operating Temperature in a Steady State" Materials 14, no. 18: 5234. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14185234
APA StyleHomik, W., Mazurkow, A., & Woś, P. (2021). Application of a Thermo-Hydrodynamic Model of a Viscous Torsional Vibration Damper to Determining Its Operating Temperature in a Steady State. Materials, 14(18), 5234. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14185234