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Thermoelastic instability in a thin layer sliding between two half-planes: transient behaviour

Thermoelastic instability in a thin layer sliding between two half-planes: transient behaviour
Thermoelastic instability in a thin layer sliding between two half-planes: transient behaviour
The susceptibility of brakes and clutches to the known phenomenon of frictionally-excited thermoelastic instability is estimated studying the interface temperature and pressure evolution with time. A simple model has been considered where a layer with half-thickness a slides with speed V between two rigid and non-conducting half-planes. The advantage of this fairly simple model is that it permits us to deduce analytically the critical conditions for the onset of instability, that is the relation between the critical speed Vcr and the growth rate b of the interface temperature and pressure. It has then been verified that as the thickness a reduces the system becomes more and more prone to instability, and that a symmetrical pressure/temperature distribution at the layer interfaces can be more unstable than an antisymmetrical one. Moreover, the analysis of the evolution of the system beyond the critical conditions has shown that even if low frequency perturbations are associated with small critical speed, they might be less critical than high frequency perturbations if the working sliding speed is much larger than the actual critical speed of the system.
hot spotting, thermoelastic instability, brakes and clutches
0301-679X
205-212
Afferante, L.
697a1eb8-5555-4d60-986c-a68fffb63488
Ciavarella, M.
d5aa6350-b3d4-4a78-a670-9d78242f58c5
Decuzzi, P.
70ed8d0a-f0f2-4510-a749-4c60dcc0eee8
Demelio, G.
cb38aabe-9837-4ab2-aa87-60028fd7b82c
Afferante, L.
697a1eb8-5555-4d60-986c-a68fffb63488
Ciavarella, M.
d5aa6350-b3d4-4a78-a670-9d78242f58c5
Decuzzi, P.
70ed8d0a-f0f2-4510-a749-4c60dcc0eee8
Demelio, G.
cb38aabe-9837-4ab2-aa87-60028fd7b82c

Afferante, L., Ciavarella, M., Decuzzi, P. and Demelio, G. (2003) Thermoelastic instability in a thin layer sliding between two half-planes: transient behaviour. Tribology International, 36 (3), 205-212. (doi:10.1016/S0301-679X(02)00185-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The susceptibility of brakes and clutches to the known phenomenon of frictionally-excited thermoelastic instability is estimated studying the interface temperature and pressure evolution with time. A simple model has been considered where a layer with half-thickness a slides with speed V between two rigid and non-conducting half-planes. The advantage of this fairly simple model is that it permits us to deduce analytically the critical conditions for the onset of instability, that is the relation between the critical speed Vcr and the growth rate b of the interface temperature and pressure. It has then been verified that as the thickness a reduces the system becomes more and more prone to instability, and that a symmetrical pressure/temperature distribution at the layer interfaces can be more unstable than an antisymmetrical one. Moreover, the analysis of the evolution of the system beyond the critical conditions has shown that even if low frequency perturbations are associated with small critical speed, they might be less critical than high frequency perturbations if the working sliding speed is much larger than the actual critical speed of the system.

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Published date: 2003
Keywords: hot spotting, thermoelastic instability, brakes and clutches

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 23219
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/23219
ISSN: 0301-679X
PURE UUID: afce4f92-9292-46d3-b106-41e260366505

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:45

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Contributors

Author: L. Afferante
Author: M. Ciavarella
Author: P. Decuzzi
Author: G. Demelio

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