Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants

The environmental impact of many industrial and naval applications is becoming increasingly important. Journal bearings are crucial components related with the reliable, safe and environmentally friendly operation of rotating machinery in many applications, e.g., in hydroplants, ships, power generat...

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Main Authors: Pantelis G. Nikolakopoulos, Dimitrios A. Bompos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-04-01
Series:Lubricants
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/3/2/155
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spelling doaj-b0449fedfda84391b5f180c759d64adb2020-11-24T23:21:12ZengMDPI AGLubricants2075-44422015-04-013215516310.3390/lubricants3020155lubricants3020155Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based LubricantsPantelis G. Nikolakopoulos0Dimitrios A. Bompos1Machine Design Laboratory, Mechanical Engineering and Aeronautics Department, University of Patras, Patras 26504, GreeceMachine Design Laboratory, Mechanical Engineering and Aeronautics Department, University of Patras, Patras 26504, GreeceThe environmental impact of many industrial and naval applications is becoming increasingly important. Journal bearings are crucial components related with the reliable, safe and environmentally friendly operation of rotating machinery in many applications, e.g., in hydroplants, ships, power generation stations. The maintenance activities in certain cases also have considerable environmental impact. Fortunately, it is relatively easy to reduce the impact by changing the way lubricants are being used. Selecting the proper lubricant is important to sharply reduce long-term costs. The best-fit product selection can mean longer lubricant life, reduced machine wear, reduced incipient power losses and improved safety. Suitable basestocks and additives reduce environmental impact. In this paper, three types of lubricants are used in order to examine their effects on the tribological behavior of journal bearings. A mineral oil, a synthetic oil and a bio-based lubricant are experimentally and analytically examined for several configurations of load and journal rotational velocity. The friction forces and the hydrodynamic friction coefficients are calculated and compared. This investigation can assist the correct choice of lubricant in journal bearings with minimized environmental footprint.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/3/2/155journal bearingbiolubricantenvironment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pantelis G. Nikolakopoulos
Dimitrios A. Bompos
spellingShingle Pantelis G. Nikolakopoulos
Dimitrios A. Bompos
Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
Lubricants
journal bearing
biolubricant
environment
author_facet Pantelis G. Nikolakopoulos
Dimitrios A. Bompos
author_sort Pantelis G. Nikolakopoulos
title Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
title_short Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
title_full Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
title_fullStr Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Measurements of Journal Bearing Friction Using Mineral, Synthetic, and Bio-Based Lubricants
title_sort experimental measurements of journal bearing friction using mineral, synthetic, and bio-based lubricants
publisher MDPI AG
series Lubricants
issn 2075-4442
publishDate 2015-04-01
description The environmental impact of many industrial and naval applications is becoming increasingly important. Journal bearings are crucial components related with the reliable, safe and environmentally friendly operation of rotating machinery in many applications, e.g., in hydroplants, ships, power generation stations. The maintenance activities in certain cases also have considerable environmental impact. Fortunately, it is relatively easy to reduce the impact by changing the way lubricants are being used. Selecting the proper lubricant is important to sharply reduce long-term costs. The best-fit product selection can mean longer lubricant life, reduced machine wear, reduced incipient power losses and improved safety. Suitable basestocks and additives reduce environmental impact. In this paper, three types of lubricants are used in order to examine their effects on the tribological behavior of journal bearings. A mineral oil, a synthetic oil and a bio-based lubricant are experimentally and analytically examined for several configurations of load and journal rotational velocity. The friction forces and the hydrodynamic friction coefficients are calculated and compared. This investigation can assist the correct choice of lubricant in journal bearings with minimized environmental footprint.
topic journal bearing
biolubricant
environment
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/3/2/155
work_keys_str_mv AT pantelisgnikolakopoulos experimentalmeasurementsofjournalbearingfrictionusingmineralsyntheticandbiobasedlubricants
AT dimitriosabompos experimentalmeasurementsofjournalbearingfrictionusingmineralsyntheticandbiobasedlubricants
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