The Effect of Journal Roughness and Foil Coatings on the Performance of Heavily Loaded Foil Air Bearings

Abstract

Foil air bearing load capacity tests were conducted to investigate if a solid lubricant coating applied to the surface of the bearing's top foil can function as a break-in coating. Two foil coating materials, a conventional soft polymer film (polyimide) and a hard ceramic (alumina), were independently evaluated against as-ground and worn (run-in) journals coated with NASA PS304, a high-temperature solid lubricant composite coating. The foil coatings were evaluated at journal rotational speeds of 30000 rpm and at 25 deg C. Tests were also performed on a foil bearing with a bare (uncoated) nickel-based superalloy top foil to establish a baseline for comparison. The test results indicate that the presence of a top foil solid lubricant coating is effective at increasing the load capacity performance of the foil bearing. Compared to the uncoated baseline, the addition of the soft polymer coating on the top foil increased the bearing load coefficient by 120 percent when operating against an as-ground journal surface and 85 percent against a run-in journal surface. The alumina coating increased the load coefficient by 40 percent against the as-ground journal but did not have any affect when the bearing was operated with the run-in journal. The results suggest that the addition of solid lubricant films provide added lubrication when the air film is marginal indicating that as the load capacity is approached foil air bearings transition from hydrodynamic to mixed and boundary lubrication.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2001
Accession Number
ADA392547

Entities

People

  • Christopher Dellacorte
  • Kevin C. Radil

Organizations

  • National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Engineered Resilient Systems
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Bearings
  • Coefficients
  • Failure Mode And Effect Analysis
  • Films
  • Foil Bearings
  • Friction
  • Gas Bearings
  • Gas Turbines
  • High Temperature
  • Lubricants
  • Lubrication
  • Materials
  • Military Research
  • Polymers
  • Roughness
  • Solid Lubricants
  • Turbines

Readers

  • Tribology (the study of the boundary interaction between sliding surfaces, lubrication, wear and friction).