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Daniele Dini, Tomasz Liskiewicz
Fretting Wear and Fretting Fatigue - Fundamental Principles and Applications
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
Fretting Wear and Fretting Fatigue: Fundamental Principles and Applications takes a combined mechanics and materials approach, providing readers with a fundamental understanding of fretting phenomena, related modeling and experimentation techniques, methods for mitigation, and robust examples of practical applications across an array of engineering disciplines. Sections cover the underpinning theories of fretting wear and fretting fatigue, delve into experimentation and modeling methods, and cover a broad array of applications of fretting fatigue and fretting wear, looking at its impacts in medical implants, suspension ropes, bearings, heating exchangers, electrical connectors, and more.
List of contents
Contributors xiii
Preface xvii
Section I History and fundamental principles
1 Brief history of the subject
Daniele Dini and Tomasz Liskiewicz
1.1 Early stages
1.2 Initial milestones in the understanding of the mechanics of fretting
1.3 Crucial steps toward a better understanding of fretting wear and fretting fatigue
1.4 State of the art at the beginning of the new millennium
Acknowledgments
References
2 Introduction to fretting fundamentals
2.1 Fretting-complexities and synergies
Tomasz Liskiewicz and Daniele Dini
2.1.1 Fretting within a wider context of tribology
2.1.2 Fretting wear
2.1.3 Fretting fatigue
2.1.4 Mitigating fretting damage
References
2.2 Contact mechanics in fretting
Daniele Dini and Tomasz Liskiewicz
2.2.1 Contact geometry
2.2.2 Friction and fretting regimes
References 36
2.3 Transition criteria and mapping approaches
Tomasz Liskiewicz, Daniele Dini, and Yanfei Liu
2.3.1 Transition criteria
2.3.2 Mapping approaches
References
2.4 Experimental methods
Tomasz Liskiewicz, Daniele Dini, and Thawhid Khan
2.4.1 Early developments
2.4.2 Basic test configurations
2.4.3 Fretting wear tests and analytical methods
2.4.4 Fretting fatigue tests and analytical methods
2.4.5 Combined fretting wear and fatigue approaches
References
2.5 Modelling approaches
Daniele Dini and Tomasz Liskiewicz
2.5.1 Theoretical models
2.5.2 Numerical models
References
Section II Fretting wear
3.1 The role of tribologically transformed structures and debris in fretting of metals
Philip Howard Shipway
3.1.1 Overview
3.1.2 Wear in both sliding and fretting-Contrasts in the transport of species into and out of the contacts
3.1.3 The nature of oxide debris formed in fretting
3.1.4 Formation of oxide debris in fretting-The role of oxygen supply and demand
3.1.5 Tribo-sintering of oxide debris and glaze formation
3.1.6 Microstructural damage-Tribologically transformed structures in fretting
3.1.7 The critical role of debris in fretting: Godet's third body approach
3.1.8 Godet's third body approach revisited: Rate-determining processes in fretting wear
3.1.9 Conclusion
References
3.2 Friction energy wear approach
Siegfried Fouvry
3.2.1 Friction energy wear approach
3.2.2 Basics regarding friction energy wear approach
3.2.3 Influence of contact loadings regarding friction energy wear rate
vi Contents
3.2.4 Influence of ambient conditions
3.2.5 Surface wear modeling using the friction energy density approach
3.2.6 Conclusions
References
3.3 Lubrication approaches
Taisuke Maruyama
3.3.1 Introduction
3.3.2 Parameter definition
3.3.3 Oil lubrication
3.3.4 Grease lubrication
3.3.5 Mechanism for fretting wear reduction in grease lubrication
3.3.6 Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
3.4 Impact of roughness
Krzysztof J. Kubiak and Thomas G. Mathia
3.4.1 Introduction
3.4.2 Contact of rough surfaces
3.4.3 Stress distribution in rough contact
3.4.4 Effective contact area
3.4.5 Coefficient of friction
3.4.6 Bearing capacity
3.4.7 Surface anisotropy and orientation
3.4.8 Transition between partial and gross slip
3.4.9 Impact of surface roughness on fretting wear
3.4.10 Friction in lubricated contact conditions
3.4.11 Energy dissipated at the interfaces for smooth and rough surfaces
3.4.12 Impact of surface roughness on crack initiation
3.4.13 Dynamics of surface roughness evolution in fretting contact
3.4.14 Measurement of fretting wear usin
About the author
Professor Tomas Liskiewicz is Head of Department of Engineering at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has over 20 years of international academic and engineering experience from leading research institutions in the UK, France, Canada, and Poland. His research interests focus on surface engineering and tribology of functional surfaces, with a particular interest in fretting wear phenomena. His work has been published in such journals as Applied Surface Engineering; Tribology International; Surface and Coatings Technology; Wear and Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. He has presented at an array of international conferences and has been involved in fretting research for 20 years, with a main focus on wear processes. He previously spent 2 years in Alberta, Canada, working as a Senior Scientist at Charter Coating, leading material testing projects for the oil and gas industry. He was elected Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in London in 2014 and is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics in London where he acts as Chair of the Tribology Group Committee.Daniele Dini is Head of the Tribology Group at Imperial College London. Prior to joining Imperial in 2006, Professor Dini studied in the Department of Engineering at the University of Oxford, working on fretting fatigue of gas turbine components. He has been involved in work on fretting fatigue and wear for over 20 years, and currently leads the advanced modeling research team within the Tribology Group at Imperial, collaborating closely with its experimentalists. His current research portfolio supports a large team of researchers focused on studies related to the modeling of tribological systems and materials. Most of these projects are multidisciplinary and range from atomic and molecular simulation of lubricants, additives, and surfaces, to modeling of systems, such as machine and biomedical components. He has received many individual and best papers awards, sits on a number of international committees and editorial boards, is a Fellow of the UK Institute of Mechanical Engineers, and has published over 200 journal articles along with several book chapters.
Product details
Assisted by | Daniele Dini (Editor), Tomasz Liskiewicz (Editor) |
Publisher | Elsevier Science & Technology |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 09.12.2022 |
EAN | 9780128240960 |
ISBN | 978-0-12-824096-0 |
Dimensions | 152 mm x 30 mm x 229 mm |
Weight | 1048 g |
Illustrations | 300 illustrations (50 in full color) |
Series |
Elsevier Series on Tribology and Surface Engineering |
Subjects |
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology
> Technology
> General, dictionaries
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Mechanical, Mechanical Engineering, Materials science |
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