TY - JOUR
T1 - Convenient formulas for modeling three-dimensional thermo-mechanical asperity contacts
AU - Liu, G.
AU - Wang, Q.
AU - Ao, Y.
PY - 2002/7
Y1 - 2002/7
N2 - Frictional heating is a common phenomenon related to friction and rubbing. Modeling the rough-surface contact in a tribological process that involves frictional heating and thermoelastic deformations requires an interactive thermal-mechanical simulation process through a large amount of numerical calculation. A three-dimensional interactive thermal-mechanical asperity contact model has been developed. The model takes into account steady-state heat transfer, asperity distortion due to thermal and elastic deformations, and material yield by means of the elastic-perfectly plastic assumption. The finite-element method (FEM), discrete convolution and fast Fourier transform (DC-FFT), and conjugate gradient method (CGM) are employed as the solution methods. This model is applied to analyze a large number of numerically generated surfaces of a wide range of statistical properties. A group of semi-empirical formulas correlating the maximum asperity flash temperature, contact pressure, real contact area, and the normal approach between the contacting surfaces is derived as a simplified version of the contact model for convenience of use in tribological simulations. These formulas are compared with the results obtained from numerical analyses with satisfactory accuracy.
AB - Frictional heating is a common phenomenon related to friction and rubbing. Modeling the rough-surface contact in a tribological process that involves frictional heating and thermoelastic deformations requires an interactive thermal-mechanical simulation process through a large amount of numerical calculation. A three-dimensional interactive thermal-mechanical asperity contact model has been developed. The model takes into account steady-state heat transfer, asperity distortion due to thermal and elastic deformations, and material yield by means of the elastic-perfectly plastic assumption. The finite-element method (FEM), discrete convolution and fast Fourier transform (DC-FFT), and conjugate gradient method (CGM) are employed as the solution methods. This model is applied to analyze a large number of numerically generated surfaces of a wide range of statistical properties. A group of semi-empirical formulas correlating the maximum asperity flash temperature, contact pressure, real contact area, and the normal approach between the contacting surfaces is derived as a simplified version of the contact model for convenience of use in tribological simulations. These formulas are compared with the results obtained from numerical analyses with satisfactory accuracy.
KW - Interactive modeling
KW - Semi-empirical equations
KW - Thermal-mechanical asperity contact
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036648060&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0301-679X(02)00022-1
DO - 10.1016/S0301-679X(02)00022-1
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:0036648060
SN - 0301-679X
VL - 35
SP - 411
EP - 423
JO - Tribology International
JF - Tribology International
IS - 7
ER -