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Journal Article

Wheel Bearing Brinelling and a Vehicle Curb Impact DOE to Understand Factors Affecting Bearing Loads

2017-09-17
2017-01-2526
As material cleanliness and bearing lubrication have improved, wheel bearings are experiencing less raceway spalling failures from rotating fatigue. Warranty part reviews have shown that two of the larger failure modes for wheel bearings are contaminant ingress and Brinell damage from curb and pothole impacts. Warranty has also shown that larger wheels have higher rates of Brinell warranty. This paper discusses the Brinell failure mode for bearings. It reviews a vehicle test used to evaluate Brinell performance for wheel bearings. The paper also discusses a design of experiments to study the effects of factors such as wheel size, vehicle loading and vehicle position versus the bearing load from a vehicle side impact to the wheel. As the trend in vehicle styling is moving to larger wheels and low profile tires, understanding the impact load can help properly size wheel bearings.
Technical Paper

Vehicle Noise Sensitivity to Different Levels of Taper Wheel Bearing Brinell Damage for Body-on-Frame Passenger Vehicles

2022-09-19
2022-01-1192
This paper reviews the relationship between taper wheel bearing damage and vehicle noise and vibration for a body-on-frame pickup truck and a body-on-frame SUV. In addition to understanding how the different levels of bearing damage relate to vehicle noise, it also discusses the level of noise versus the damaged bearing’s position in the vehicle. For this study, the wheel bearing supplier provided front and rear bearings with various amounts of Brinell damage to the bearing raceways. The different bearings were evaluated subjectively for noise in the vehicle. After vehicle testing, the bearing raceway Brinell depths were measured to correlate the level of bearing damage to vehicle noise. The study shows the relationship between bearing Brinell dent depth and vehicle noise for body-on-frame light trucks and SUVs. The noise was most apparent in vehicles between 45 and 60 mph. For bearings with moderate levels of damage, steering inputs were required to hear noise.
Technical Paper

Thermomechanical Fatigue Life Predictions of Cast Aluminum Cylinder Heads Considering Defect Distribution

2023-04-11
2023-01-0594
Semi-Permanent Mold (SPM) cast aluminum alloy cylinder heads are commonly used in gasoline and diesel internal combustion engines. The cast aluminum cylinder heads must withstand severe cyclic mechanical and thermal loads throughout their lifetime. The casting process is inherently prone to introducing casting defects and microstructural heterogeneity. Porosity, which is one of the most dominant volumetric defects in such castings, has a significant detrimental effect on the fatigue life of these components since it acts as a crack initiation site. A reliable analytical model for Thermo-Mechanical Fatigue (TMF) life prediction must take into account the presence of these defects. In previous publications, it has been shown that the mechanism-based TMF damage model (DTMF) is able to predict with good accuracy crack locations and the number of cycles to propagate an initial defect into a critical crack size in aluminum cylinder heads considering ageing effects.
Technical Paper

Thermomechanical Fatigue Crack Growth Simulation in a Turbo-Housing Model Using Nonlinear Fracture Mechanics

2023-04-11
2023-01-0596
Turbocharger housings in internal combustion engines are subjected to severe mechanical and thermal cyclic loads throughout their life-time or during engine testing. The combination of thermal transients and mechanical load cycling results in a complex evolution of damage, leading to thermo-mechanical fatigue (TMF) of the material. For the computational TMF life assessment of high temperature components, the DTMF model can provide reliable TMF life predictions. The model is based on a short fatigue crack growth law and uses local finite-element (FE) results to predict the number of cycles to failure for a technical crack. In engine applications, it is nowadays often acceptable to have short cracks as long as they do not propagate and cause loss of function of the component. Thus, it is necessary to predict not only potential crack locations and the corresponding number of cycles for a technical crack, but also to determine subsequent crack growth or even a possible crack arrest.
Technical Paper

Thermomechanical Fatigue Behavior of a Cast Austenitic Stainless Steel

2024-04-09
2024-01-2683
Cast austenitic stainless steels, such as 1.4837Nb, are widely used for turbo housing and exhaust manifolds which are subjected to elevated temperatures. Due to assembly constraints, geometry limitation, and particularly high temperatures, thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) issue is commonly seen in the service of those components. Therefore, it is critical to understand the TMF behavior of the cast steels. In the present study, a series of fatigue tests including isothermal low cycle fatigue tests at elevated temperatures up to 1100°C, in-phase and out-of-phase TMF tests in the temperature ranges 100-800°C and 100-1000°C have been conducted. Both creep and oxidation are active in these conditions, and their contributions to the damage of the steel are discussed.
Journal Article

The Influence of Wheel Rotations to the Lateral Runout of a Hybrid Material or Dimensionally Reduced Wheel Bearing Flange

2021-10-11
2021-01-1298
The automotive industry is continuously striving to reduce vehicle mass by reducing the mass of components including wheel bearings. A typical wheel bearing assembly is mostly steel, including both the wheel and knuckle mounting flanges. Mass optimization of the wheel hub has traditionally been accomplished by reducing the cross-sectional thickness of these components. Recently bearing suppliers have also investigated the use of alternative materials. While bearing component performance is verified through analysis and testing by the supplier, additional effects from system integration and performance over time also need to be comprehended. In a recent new vehicle architecture, the wheel bearing hub flange was reduced to optimize it for low mass. In addition, holes were added for further mass reduction. The design met all the supplier and OEM component level specifications.
Journal Article

The Effect of Outer Ring Distortion on Wheel Bearing Friction Torque

2017-09-17
2017-01-2521
Wheel bearing friction torque (“drag”) directly contributes to vehicle fuel economy and CO2 emissions. At the same time, one of the most important factors for long-term durability of wheel bearings is effective seal performance. Since these two factors are often in conflict, it is important to balance the desire for low friction with the need for optimal sealing. One factor that affects wheel bearing sealing performance is the distortion of the outer ring that occurs when the bearing is mounted to the steering knuckle with fasteners. Minimizing this distortion is not just important for sealing, however. This paper explores the relationship between the outer ring distortion and the resulting friction torque. A design of experiments (DOE) approach was used in order to study the effects of the fastening bolt torque, constant velocity joint (CVJ) fastening torque, and outer ring distortion on component-level drag.
Technical Paper

Tensile Material Properties of Fabrics for Vehicle Interiors from Digital Image Correlation

2013-04-08
2013-01-1422
Fabric materials have diverse applications in the automotive industry which include upholstery, carpeting, safety devices, and interior trim components. The textile industry has invested substantial effort toward development of standard testing techniques for characterizing mechanical properties of different fabric types (e.g. woven and knitted). However, there are presently no standards for determination of Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio and tensile stress-strain properties required for the detailed modeling of fabric materials in vehicle structural simulations. This paper presents results from uniaxial tensile tests of different automotive seat cover fabric materials. Digital image correlation, a full field optical method for measuring surface deformation, was used to determine tensile properties in both the warp/wale and the weft/course directions. The fabrics were tested with and without the foam backing.
Technical Paper

Structural Performance Comparison between 980MPa Generation 3 Steel and Press Hardened Steel Applied in the Body-in-White A and B-Pillar Parts

2020-04-14
2020-01-0537
Commercially available Generation 3 (GEN3) advanced high strength steels (AHSS) have inherent capability of replacing press hardened steels (PHS) using cold stamping processes. 980 GEN3 AHSS is a cold stampable steel with 980 MPa minimum tensile strength that exhibits an excellent combination of formability and strength. Hot forming of PHS requires elevated temperatures (> 800°C) to enable complex deep sections. 980 GEN3 AHSS presents similar formability as 590 DP material, allowing engineers to design complex geometries similar to PHS material; however, its cold formability provides implied potential process cost savings in automotive applications. The increase in post-forming yield strength of GEN3 AHSS due to work and bake hardening contributes strongly toward crash performance in energy absorption and intrusion resistance.
Journal Article

Strain Rate Effect on Martensitic Transformation in a TRIP Steel Containing Carbide-Free Bainite

2019-04-02
2019-01-0521
Adiabatic heating during plastic straining can slow the diffusionless shear transformation of austenite to martensite in steels that exhibit transformation induced plasticity (TRIP). However, the extent to which the transformation is affected over a strain rate range of relevance to automotive stamping and vehicle impact events is unclear for most third-generation advanced high strength TRIP steels. In this study, an 1180MPa minimum tensile strength TRIP steel with carbide-free bainite is evaluated by measuring the variation of retained austenite volume fraction (RAVF) in fractured tensile specimens with position and strain. This requires a combination of servo-hydraulic load frame instrumented with high speed stereo digital image correlation for measurement of strains and ex-situ synchrotron x-ray diffraction for determination of RAVF in fractured tensile specimens.
Technical Paper

Strain Amount and Strain Path Effects on Instrumented Charpy Toughness of Baked Third Generation Advanced High Strength Steels

2021-04-06
2021-01-0266
Third generation advanced high strength steels (AHSS) that rely on the transformation of austenite to martensite have gained growing interest for implementation into vehicle architectures. Previous studies have identified a dependency of the rate of austenite decomposition on the amount of strain and the associated strain path imposed on the sheet. The rate and amount of austenite transformation can impact the work hardening behavior and tensile properties. However, a deeper understanding of the impact on toughness, and thus crash performance, is not fully developed. In this study, the strain path and strain amounts were systematically controlled to understand the associated correlation to impact toughness in the end application condition (strained and baked). Impact toughness was evaluated using an instrumented Charpy machine with a single sheet v-notch sample configuration.
Technical Paper

Springback Prediction and Correlations for Third Generation High Strength Steel

2020-04-14
2020-01-0752
Third generation advanced high strength steels (3GAHSS) are increasingly used in automotive for light weighting and safety body structure components. However, high material strength usually introduces higher springback that affects the dimensional accuracy. The ability to accurately predict springback in simulations is very important to reduce time and cost in stamping tool and process design. In this work, tension and compression tests were performed and the results were implemented to generate Isotropic/Kinematic hardening (I/KH) material models on a 3GAHSS steel with 980 MPa minimum tensile strength. Systematic material model parametric studies and evaluations have been conducted. Case studies from full-scale industrial parts are provided and the predicted springback results are compared to the measured springback data. Key variables affecting the springback prediction accuracy are identified.
Technical Paper

Self-Tuning PID Design for Slip Control of Wedge Clutches

2017-03-28
2017-01-1112
The wedge clutch takes advantages of small actuation force/torque, space-saving and energy-saving. However, big challenge arises from the varying self-reinforced ratio due to the varying friction coefficient inevitably affected by temperature and wear. In order to improve the smoothness and synchronization time of the slipping process of the wedge clutch, this paper proposes a self-tuning PID controller based on Lyapunov principle. A new Lyapunov function is developed for the wedge clutch system. Simulation results show that the self-tuning PID obtains much less error than the conventional PID with fixed gains. Moreover, the self-tuning PID is more adaptable to the variation of the friction coefficient for the error is about 1/5 of the conventional PID.
Journal Article

Retained Austenite Stability and Impact Performance of Advanced High Strength Steel at Reduced Temperatures

2017-03-28
2017-01-1707
Retained austenite stability to both mechanically induced transformation and athermal transformation is of great importance to the fabrication and in-vehicle performance of automotive advanced high strength steels. Selected cold-rolled advanced high strength steels containing retained austenite with minimum tensile strengths of 980 MPa and 1180 MPa were pre-strained to pre-determined levels under uniaxial tension in the rolling direction and subsequently cooled to temperatures as low as 77 K. Room temperature uniaxial tensile results of pre-strained and cooled steels indicate that retained austenite is stable to athermal transformation to martensite at all tested temperatures and pre-strain levels. To evaluate the combined effects of temperature and pre-strain on impact behavior, stacked Charpy impact testing was conducted on the same 980 MPa minimum tensile strength steel following similar pre-straining in uniaxial tension.
Technical Paper

Reliability Based Design Optimization Process for Door Slam Durability

2021-04-06
2021-01-0280
The objective of this project was to establish a process to perform reliability-based design optimization for improved robustness and understanding of variability inside door slam durability performance. The existing analysis process assesses only the nominal door design. The updated process was automated to include a large-scale DOE which defines the range of durability performance. Then a large-scale Monte Carlo simulation is run to provide a probabilistic distribution of the predicted durability performance. Many variables are included in the DOE based on manufacturing build tolerance, material & weld properties, and material thickness variation due stamping/thinning. 300 finite element model runs are done to complete the DOE and define the fatigue performance domain. From these full FEA model runs, Kriging surfaces are created to quickly provide estimated performance for 4096 Monte Carlo simulation data points.
Technical Paper

Random Vibration Fatigue Life Assessment of Transmission Control Module (TCM) Bracket Considering the Mean Stress Effect due to Preload

2020-04-14
2020-01-0194
Transmission Control Module (TCM) bracket is mounted on the vehicle chassis and is subjected to the random load excitation due to the uneven surface of the road. Assembly of the TCM bracket on the vehicle chassis induces some constant stress on it due to bolt preload, which acts as a mean stress along with the varying random loads. It is important for a design engineer and CAE analyst to understand the effect of all sources of loads on vehicle mount brackets while designing them. The objective of this study is to consider the effect of mean stress in the random vibration fatigue assessment of TCM bracket. The random vibration fatigue analyses are performed for all the three directions without and with consideration of mean loads and results are compared to show the significance of mean stresses in random vibration fatigue life.
Technical Paper

Purge Pump Rotor Dynamics Subjected to Ball Bearing Inner and Outer Race Wear Defects

2020-04-14
2020-01-0403
The purge pump is used to pull evaporative gases from canister and send to engine for combustion in Turbocharged engines. The purge pump with impeller at one end and electric motor at the other end is supported by the ball bearing assembly. A bearing kinematic model to predict forcing function due to defect in ball bearing arrangement, coupled with bearing dynamic model of rotor because of rotating component, is proposed in this paper to get accumulated effect on transmitted force to the purge pump housing. Rotor dynamic of purge pump rotor components only produces certain order forcing responses which can be simulated into the multibody software environment, knowing the ball bearing geometry parameters hence providing stiffness parameter for rotor system.
Technical Paper

Power Loss Studies for Rolling Element Bearings Subject to Combined Radial and Axial Loading

2023-04-11
2023-01-0461
The power loss of bearings is a significant factor in the overall efficiency in a drive unit system. Such bearings are subject to combined radial and axial loading needed to support the gear mesh forces. An experimental methodology has been developed to perform sets of power loss measurements on TRB, 4PCBB and DGBB. These measurements were performed under a variety of speed, load, temperature, and lubrication conditions. The loss behaviors of these types of the bearings are discussed, along with the tradeoff of different bearing arrangements for the fuel economy cycles. Several power loss models are employed to assess the accuracy of the estimations as compared to the experimental measurements. At low speed some models showed good correlations for TRB and DGBB, while at higher speed, they start deviating from the testing results. A higher fidelity model for estimating the losses at high speed, especially speed around 20krpm and beyond, needs to be developed.
Technical Paper

Porosity Characterization of Cast Al Alloys with X-Ray Computed Tomography andScanning Electron Microscope

2021-04-06
2021-01-0306
Cast Al-Si alloys are widely used in automotive industry to produce structural components, such as engine block and cylinder head, because of the increasing demands in reducing mass for improved fuel efficiency. The fatigue performance of the castings is critical in their application. Porosity is highly detrimental to the fatigue behavior of cast Al-Si alloys. Therefore, accurate measurement of pore sizes is important in order to develop the correlations between porosity and fatigue strength. However, quantification of porosity is challenging and shows large variation depending on the measurement methods, particularly for micro-shrinkage porosity due to the torturous and complex morphology. The conventional metallographic image analysis method in the 2D polished surface often underestimates the actual pore size particularly when the porosity morphology is complex.
Technical Paper

Modified Experimental Approach to Investigate Coefficient of Friction and Wear under Lubricated Fretting Condition by Utilizing SRV Test Machine

2018-04-03
2018-01-0835
Fretting is an important phenomenon that happens in many mechanical parts. It is the main reason in deadly failures in automobiles, airliners, and turbine engines. The damage is noticed between two surfaces clamped together by bolts or rivets that are nominally at rest, but have a small amplitude oscillation because of vibration or local cyclic loading. Fretting damage can be divided into two types. The first type is the fretting fatigue damage where a crack would initiate and propagate at specific location at the interface of the mating surfaces. Cracks usually initiate in the material with lower strength because of the local cyclic loading conditions which eventually lead to full failure. The second type is the fretting wear damage because of external vibration. Researchers have investigated this phenomenon by theoretical modeling and experimental approaches. Although a lot of research has been done on fretting damage, some of the parameters have not been well studied.
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