JOURNAL OF JAPANESE SOCIETY OF TRIBOLOGISTS
Online ISSN : 2189-9967
Print ISSN : 0915-1168
ISSN-L : 0915-1168
Volume 69, Issue 1
Special Issue on Recent Trends in Tribology Led by Technical Committees in JAST
Displaying 1-22 of 22 articles from this issue
Announcement
Contents
Foreword
Special Issue on Recent Trends in Tribology Led by Technical Committees in JAST
Explanation
Up-to-date News Tribo-Episode -Tribologist Received Ph.D.-
Original Contribution on Science
  • Shigeyoshi KAWAKITA, Yuuichirou TANIKAWA, Shinji TANAKA, Keiji KYOGOKU ...
    2024 Volume 69 Issue 1 Pages 32-42
    Published: January 15, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: January 15, 2024
    Advance online publication: October 13, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    In swash plate type axial piston pumps, slipper/swash plate sliding surfaces is subject to high fluctuating load. Therefore, the slippers are required to provide stable operation and reduce losses due to sliding. The behavior of the slipper fluctuates in a complex manner due to changes in the hydraulic pressure in the cylinder and inertial forces caused by the reciprocating motion of the piston. However, the time variation of the oil film thickness distribution of the slipper has not been measured. Furthermore, there are no measurements of the movement of the spherical joint connecting the slipper and piston, which affects the slipper behavior. In this study, the visualized sliding test rig with a sapphire glass swash plate was developed. The oil film thickness distribution of the slipper and the rotation of the slipper and the piston were measured continuously during one rotation of the pump.

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  • Kyosuke ONO
    2024 Volume 69 Issue 1 Pages 43-55
    Published: January 15, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: January 15, 2024
    Advance online publication: October 13, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    This paper formulated a modified Reynolds equation that can calculate the lubrication characteristics of bearings with high-viscosity surface layers on both bearing surfaces expressed by arbitrary viscosity function. From comparison with the measured effective viscosity of engine oil with metallic detergent, the saturated viscosity function was determined, where the effective viscosity saturates to 500 times the bulk viscosity when the gap decreases to the saturated viscosity film thickness 2zc of 100 nm. Then, the lubrication characteristics of micro-tapered pad bearing of 250 µm in length were analyzed. The load capacity was ~70 times the bulk viscosity case when the trailing gap hT decreased to 2zc. Next, the effective viscosity of engine oil with only a viscosity modifier additive can be obtained by using another viscosity function in which the increasing rate in viscosity is maximum on the bearing surface and 2zc is ~60 nm. Using this viscosity function, the bearing characteristics of tapered pad bearing were analyzed. The load capacity was ~13 times the bulk viscosity case when hT was zc. For both the viscosity functions, the load capacity was almost the same if the film thickness of the one-side model is twice as large as that of the two-side model.

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  • ―Estimation of van der WAALS Type Viscosity Equation’s Constants and High-Pressure Viscosity of Lubricants by Multiple Regression Analysis―
    Masato KANEKO
    2024 Volume 69 Issue 1 Pages 56-67
    Published: January 15, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: January 15, 2024
    Advance online publication: September 13, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Supplementary material

    High-pressure viscosity of lubricant is important for elucidating the lubrication state of metalworking, bearing and gear in the elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) region. The van der Waals type viscosity equation was derived in a previous report and it was applied to the estimation of high-pressure viscosity. Furthermore, I accumulated the data of various lubricants for three material-specific constants included in this equation, namely absolute zero viscosity µt=0 [mPa・s], viscosity coefficient S [GPa/K²], and pressure constant PV [GPa]. In this study, a multiple regression equation was derived by conducting the multiple regression analysis on the three material-specific constants as target variables, while the physical properties and the chemical structure of the lubricant were explanatory variables. As a result, it was revealed that the three material-specific constants (ηt=0 mr-eq, S mr-eq, PV mr-eq) in the van der Waals type viscosity equation and the high-pressure viscosity ηmr-eq [mPa・s] could be estimated from this multiple regression equation for unknown lubricants only by analyzing their physical properties and chemical structures, without experimentally measuring viscosity using high-pressure viscosity test apparatus.

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