Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct

Rolling element bearings for aero engine applications have to withstand very challenging operating conditions because of the high thermal impact due to elevated rotational speeds and loads. The high rate of heat generation in the bearing has to be sustained by the materials, and in the absence of lu...

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Main Authors: Michael Flouros, Peter Gloeckner, Markus Hirschmann, Matthias Martin, Francois Cottier, Dimitra Papailia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-02-01
Series:Aerospace
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/23
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spelling doaj-8c3b94bb5d1549858cea743e22d58e6d2020-11-25T01:15:38ZengMDPI AGAerospace2226-43102018-02-01512310.3390/aerospace5010023aerospace5010023Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical DuctMichael Flouros0Peter Gloeckner1Markus Hirschmann2Matthias Martin3Francois Cottier4Dimitra Papailia5MTU Aero Engines AG, 80995 Munich, GermanyFAG Aerospace GmbH, 97421 Schweinfurt, GermanyMTU Aero Engines AG, 80995 Munich, GermanyFAG Aerospace GmbH, 97421 Schweinfurt, GermanyMTU Aero Engines AG, 80995 Munich, GermanyAristotle University, 54124 Thessaloniki, GreeceRolling element bearings for aero engine applications have to withstand very challenging operating conditions because of the high thermal impact due to elevated rotational speeds and loads. The high rate of heat generation in the bearing has to be sustained by the materials, and in the absence of lubrication these will fail within seconds. For this reason, aero engine bearings have to be lubricated and cooled by a continuous oil stream. When the oil has reached the outer ring it has already been heated up, thus its capability to remove extra heat from the outer ring is considerably reduced. Increasing the mass flow of oil to the bearing is not a solution since excess oil quantity would cause high parasitic losses (churning) in the bearing chamber and also increase the demands in the oil system for oil storage, scavenging, cooling, hardware weight, etc. A method has been developed for actively cooling the outer ring of the bearing. The idea behind the outer ring cooling concept was adopted from fins that are used for cooling electronic devices. A spiral groove engraved in the outer ring material of the bearing would function as a fin body with oil instead of air as the cooling medium. The method was first evaluated in an all steel ball bearing and the results were a 50% reduction in the lubricating oil flow with an additional reduction in heat generation by more than 25%. It was then applied on a Hybrid ball bearing of the same size and the former results were reconfirmed. Hybrid bearings are a combination of steel made parts, like the outer ring, the inner ring, and the cage and of ceramic rolling elements. This paper describes the work done to-date as a follow up of the work described in, and demonstrates the potential of the outer ring cooling for a bearing. Friction loss coefficient, Nusselt number, and efficiency correlations have been developed on the basis of the test results and have been compared to correlations from other authors. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysis with ANSYS CFX has been used to verify test results and also for parametric studies.http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/23ceramicshybrid bearingall-steel bearingAero engineheat transferhelical ductfinsheat exchangerspeed parameterCFD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Flouros
Peter Gloeckner
Markus Hirschmann
Matthias Martin
Francois Cottier
Dimitra Papailia
spellingShingle Michael Flouros
Peter Gloeckner
Markus Hirschmann
Matthias Martin
Francois Cottier
Dimitra Papailia
Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
Aerospace
ceramics
hybrid bearing
all-steel bearing
Aero engine
heat transfer
helical duct
fins
heat exchanger
speed parameter
CFD
author_facet Michael Flouros
Peter Gloeckner
Markus Hirschmann
Matthias Martin
Francois Cottier
Dimitra Papailia
author_sort Michael Flouros
title Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
title_short Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
title_full Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
title_fullStr Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
title_full_unstemmed Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Outer Ring Cooling Concept in a Hybrid and in an All-Steel Ball Bearing Used in Aero-Engines by the Introduction of a Helical Duct
title_sort experimental and numerical investigation of the outer ring cooling concept in a hybrid and in an all-steel ball bearing used in aero-engines by the introduction of a helical duct
publisher MDPI AG
series Aerospace
issn 2226-4310
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Rolling element bearings for aero engine applications have to withstand very challenging operating conditions because of the high thermal impact due to elevated rotational speeds and loads. The high rate of heat generation in the bearing has to be sustained by the materials, and in the absence of lubrication these will fail within seconds. For this reason, aero engine bearings have to be lubricated and cooled by a continuous oil stream. When the oil has reached the outer ring it has already been heated up, thus its capability to remove extra heat from the outer ring is considerably reduced. Increasing the mass flow of oil to the bearing is not a solution since excess oil quantity would cause high parasitic losses (churning) in the bearing chamber and also increase the demands in the oil system for oil storage, scavenging, cooling, hardware weight, etc. A method has been developed for actively cooling the outer ring of the bearing. The idea behind the outer ring cooling concept was adopted from fins that are used for cooling electronic devices. A spiral groove engraved in the outer ring material of the bearing would function as a fin body with oil instead of air as the cooling medium. The method was first evaluated in an all steel ball bearing and the results were a 50% reduction in the lubricating oil flow with an additional reduction in heat generation by more than 25%. It was then applied on a Hybrid ball bearing of the same size and the former results were reconfirmed. Hybrid bearings are a combination of steel made parts, like the outer ring, the inner ring, and the cage and of ceramic rolling elements. This paper describes the work done to-date as a follow up of the work described in, and demonstrates the potential of the outer ring cooling for a bearing. Friction loss coefficient, Nusselt number, and efficiency correlations have been developed on the basis of the test results and have been compared to correlations from other authors. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysis with ANSYS CFX has been used to verify test results and also for parametric studies.
topic ceramics
hybrid bearing
all-steel bearing
Aero engine
heat transfer
helical duct
fins
heat exchanger
speed parameter
CFD
url http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/23
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