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Aerospace Engineering

Theses/Dissertations

Friction

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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Consideration Of Wear Rates At High Velocity, Chad S. Hale Mar 2010

Consideration Of Wear Rates At High Velocity, Chad S. Hale

Theses and Dissertations

The development of the research presented here is one in which high velocity relative sliding motion between two bodies in contact has been considered. The experimental results of a VascoMax 300 maraging steel slipper sliding on an AISI 1080 steel rail during a January 2008 sled test mission were considered for the determination of high velocity wear rates. The numerical model, based on a metallographic study of a test slipper, contained all of the physical features present in order to adequately characterize high velocity wear rates. Two-dimensional, plane strain models have been implemented in the explicit finite element code, ABAQUS. …


Turbine Blade Surface Roughness Effects On Shear Drag And Heat Transfer, Jess W. Drab Mar 2001

Turbine Blade Surface Roughness Effects On Shear Drag And Heat Transfer, Jess W. Drab

Theses and Dissertations

This work used scaled samples of actual turbine blade surfaces to characterize correlations between turbine surface roughness, friction coefficient, and convective heat transfer rate-parameters which affect an engine's efficiency and the blade's lifespan. For erosion/deposits, friction coefficients up to 250 times higher and convective heat transfer coefficients of up to 150 times higher were found when compared to a flat plate baseline. Other roughness types (pitting and fuel deposits) yielded less dramatic results. These results did not follow existing friction coefficient-to-heat transfer coefficient correlations, such as the Reynolds analogy. While these analytical and empirical correlations hold for flat plates, they …