Preliminary CFD Simulations of Lubrication and Heat Transfer in a Gearbox

Author(s):  
Evgenia Korsukova ◽  
Hervé Morvan

When designing a gearbox it is important to consider the heat rise generated inside the gearbox due to the gear meshing action of gear teeth. Providing efficient lubrication helps keep the gearbox at lower temperatures and reduce friction, which in return leads to a longer lifespan. Given the difficulty in obtaining experimental data within the gearbox, the authors investigate and present the setup and methods using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modelling of the process. The main purpose of this work is to implement and demonstrate numerical techniques that are needed in order to perform CFD simulations on this subject. There are currently no widely used techniques known to the authors that would allow to carry out parametric CFD study of gearbox lubrication and cooling. There are only limited empirical models that are used to find a best design. When developed, CFD methods may allow to do parametric studies and therefore significantly improve the quality of the gearbox design. In order to capture the fluid behaviour in a continuously changing topology around rotating gears, dynamic mesh technique with remeshing and smoothing is used. Dynamic mesh is a complex and expensive technique on its own; and becomes even more so when have to be implemented along with the two-phase flow and conjugated heat transfer. For that reason the development and implementation of this method requires an incremental approach with very gradual increase of difficulty and separation of the large task into small ones, which essentially what has been done in this work. Furthermore, investigation of how to reduce the cost of the simulation is an important part so that the method can then be used more widely. Two types of lubrication are considered: partial dipping into oil (rotational submersion) and jet spraying. Rotational speeds of up to 8,000rpm are studied. Temperature of the gears and the surrounding fluids are initially defined as uniform. Additional heat sources are created in the solid cells of the gears where the teeth come into contact, also using a UDF. 2.5D dynamic remeshing is used for models with spur gears, whereas full 3D remeshing is used with helical gears. Simulations are performed using the Volume of Fluid method and the standard k-omega turbulence model. Simulations are run with varying degrees of complexity (low- and high-fidelity). Some results of basic preliminary simulations are compared with available results from the literature, demonstrating a good agreement. Validation of the results demonstrate the ability of the presented methods to accurately predict the gear losses and the fluid flow in a gearbox. More complex simulations are run in order to observe and analyse both the fluid flow and the heat distribution in the gearbox. Main attention is given to the temperatures of the housing and the meshing teeth. Since all simulations with meshing gears require a small gap between the gears (i.e. with no direct contact of the gears), three different gap sizes are investigated. For these simulations a comparison of the oil flow is provided. This comparison is used to justify which model can be used most efficiently without significant loss of accuracy when modelling the temperature distribution at the housing. Current work is an essential first step towards the detailed study that is currently of great interest of both research and industry. Future work is necessary to fully justify the methods, however the current work is essential and will hopefully provide an inspiration and encouraging of the topic advancement.

Author(s):  
Michael Flouros ◽  
Francois Cottier

The aim of this paper is to investigate, first, the effects of screens introduced around bearings and, second, the use of protruded instead of flush installed vent pipes. The investigation focuses on the air and oil flow distributions and on the heat transfer in the scavenge and the vent pipes in an aeroengine bearing chamber. The flow distribution has an impact on the pipe’s wall temperature distribution with the likelihood of generating hot spots. High temperatures may cause substantial effects on the health of the lubrication system. Problems may range from oil quality degradation to oil self ignition. A steady state CFD analysis of the heat transfer involving the two-phase air and oil flow in these pipes is performed using the ANSYS CFX package. It was demonstrated that whereas screens around bearings reduce the parasitic losses and vent protrusion reduces the oil flow to the air/oil separator, however, due to the oil flow distribution the thermal effects may lead to high material temperatures and to malfunctions in the engine’s lube system.


Author(s):  
M. Venkatesan ◽  
M. Aravinthan ◽  
Sarit K. Das ◽  
A. R. Balakrishnan

Two phase flows in mini channels occur in many industrial applications such as electronic cooling, compact heat exchangers, compact refrigeration systems and in micro propulsion devices. Due to its significance, research on two phase flow in mini channels has become attractive. However, in recent times a controversy exists whether flow in minichannel is different from macro flow because there are still substantial disagreements among various experimental results. In the present study an experimental investigation is carried out for fluid flow and boiling heat transfer characteristics of mini channels with tube diameters ranging from 1–3mm. The tubes were made of SS with water as the working fluid. The variation in friction factor and Nusselt number with decrease in tube diameter for single phase flow was systematically studied. The point of Onset of Nucelate Boiling (ONB) was identified based on wall temperature profile. The effect of heat flux and mass flux on two phase pressure drop with three different tube diameters during sub cooled boiling were investigated. The results reveal that there is an unmistakable effect of tube diameter on fluid friction and onset of boiling during sub cooled boiling in tubes of mini channel dimensions.


Author(s):  
Mirco Magnini ◽  
John R. Thome

This work presents a new boiling heat transfer prediction method for slug flow within microchannels, which is developed and benchmarked against the results of two-phase CFD simulations. The proposed method adopts a two-zone decomposition of the flow for the sequential passage of a liquid slug and an evaporating elongated bubble. The heat transfer is modeled by assuming transient heat conduction across the liquid film surrounding an elongated bubble and sequential conduction/convection within the liquid slug. Embedded submodels for estimating important flow parameters, e.g. bubble velocity and liquid film thickness, are implemented as “building blocks”, thus making the entire modeling framework totally stand-alone. The CFD simulations are performed by utilizing ANSYS Fluent v. 14.5 and the interface between the vapor and liquid phases is captured by the built-in Volume Of Fluid algorithm. Improved schemes to compute the surface tension force and the phase change due to evaporation are implemented by means of self-developed functions. The comparison with the CFD results shows that the proposed method emulates well the bubble dynamics during evaporation, and predicts accurately the time-averaged heat transfer coefficients during the initial transient regime and the terminal steady-periodic stages of the flow.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bautista-Fragoso ◽  
Yuri V. Fairuzov

Abstract A numerical model of transient two-phase flow and conjugate heat transfer in a vertical pipeline is presented in the present paper. The drift-flux model is used to describe the fluid flow in the pipeline. The modeling of transient conjugate heat transfer is based on a mathematical formulation in which the pipe wall and the fluid are assumed to be in local thermal equilibrium. The effect of the thermal capacity of the pipe wall is taken into account by an additional term in the energy equation for the fluid flow. Such an approach allows significant simplifying the problem and reducing the computer running time. Numerical simulations of blowdown of a pipeline/riser system were performed. The effect of the pipe wall on the flow behavior was investigated.


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