TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating Film Thickness and Friction of an MR-Lubricated Journal Bearing
AU - van der Meer, G.H.G.
AU - van Ostayen, R.A.J.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Magnetorheological (MR) fluids are frequently reported to have potential as lubricants for hydrodynamic bearings operating at high loads, but no comprehensive effort has been made to investigate their performance under a variety of operating conditions. This paper, therefore, presents an extensive experimental and numerical investigation of an MR-lubricated hydrodynamic journal bearing subjected to different loads and magnetic fields, and compares these results to those of an oil-lubricated bearing. It is shown that by increasing the magnetic field strength, the performance characteristics of the bearing can be changed from low hydrodynamic friction and a high transition speed to high hydrodynamic friction and a low transition speed. Furthermore, it was found that the way in which these characteristics scale with increasing load differs for the MR- and oil-lubricated bearings. With MR lubrication, the relative change in characteristics with the application of a magnetic field is smaller at higher loads, due to the strong shear-thinning rheology of MR fluids. To include these effects in the model, a basic relation for the apparent MR viscosity as a function of shear rate, temperature, and magnetic field strength is introduced. Finally, the bearing was made from a polymer to improve wear resistance under MR lubrication, but a comparison with a Reynolds equation-based numerical model indicates possible performance degradation due to shape errors, which is a known issue with this bearing material.
AB - Magnetorheological (MR) fluids are frequently reported to have potential as lubricants for hydrodynamic bearings operating at high loads, but no comprehensive effort has been made to investigate their performance under a variety of operating conditions. This paper, therefore, presents an extensive experimental and numerical investigation of an MR-lubricated hydrodynamic journal bearing subjected to different loads and magnetic fields, and compares these results to those of an oil-lubricated bearing. It is shown that by increasing the magnetic field strength, the performance characteristics of the bearing can be changed from low hydrodynamic friction and a high transition speed to high hydrodynamic friction and a low transition speed. Furthermore, it was found that the way in which these characteristics scale with increasing load differs for the MR- and oil-lubricated bearings. With MR lubrication, the relative change in characteristics with the application of a magnetic field is smaller at higher loads, due to the strong shear-thinning rheology of MR fluids. To include these effects in the model, a basic relation for the apparent MR viscosity as a function of shear rate, temperature, and magnetic field strength is introduced. Finally, the bearing was made from a polymer to improve wear resistance under MR lubrication, but a comparison with a Reynolds equation-based numerical model indicates possible performance degradation due to shape errors, which is a known issue with this bearing material.
KW - magnetorheological fluid
KW - hydrodynamic lubrication
KW - generalised Reynolds equation
KW - Herschel–Bulkley fluid
U2 - 10.3390/lubricants13040171
DO - 10.3390/lubricants13040171
M3 - Article
SN - 2075-4442
VL - 13
JO - Lubricants
JF - Lubricants
IS - 4
M1 - 171
ER -