Advanced techniques for numerical contact analysis in spiral bevel gears
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Vivet, Mathijs
Desmet, Wim
Mundo, Domenico
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Dottorato di Rocerca in Ingegneria Civile ed Industriale. Ciclo XXX; The research presented in this dissertation treats the subject of efficient gear
contact simulation and is applied to the contact analysis of spiral bevel gears.
In today’s competitive environment getting better products to market faster
is essential to win a customer’s interest and loyalty. Therefore, engineers are
evermore in need of the correct solutions to rapidly predict, analyze and improve
their designs if they want to meet the tight development schedules and budgets.
Within the current development cycle of mechanical transmissions, computerized
tooth contact analysis (TCA) has proven to be an invaluable tool to predict a
gear pair’s key contact performance characteristics, while reducing the need
for expensive physical prototyping and labor-intensive experimental testing.
However, the geometrical complexity of the gear teeth still pose significant
computational challenges to the tooth contact simulation for spiral bevel gears.
Correctly capturing the spatial nature of the motion transfer and the resulting
contact load distribution requires a three-dimensional gear contact model.
Finite element method (FEM) based contact simulations are usually conducted,
especially in an industrial context, while various tailor-made solutions also
exist. When performing the contact detection, many of these solutions tend
to apply a general contact detection method (e.g. node-to-surface) that treats
the contacting gear teeth flanks as arbitrary surfaces. Not realizing that the
gear flanks are designed to transmit motion in a near-conjugate way, leads to
inefficient contact searches for which the associated computational cost not only
limits TCA’s application to static component-level analysis but also hinders
extension towards full-system level analysis or dynamic gear contact simulation.
Building upon the existing concept of the surface of roll angles to efficiently
detect contact, this dissertation develops a new penetration-based contact model
to compute the three-dimensional contact loads from the actual position and
orientation of the real tooth surfaces, whether misaligned or not. The proposed
methods show to correctly predict component behavior at a computational cost
that enables further application in system-level or dynamic analyses.
An accurate description of the spiral bevel gear tooth surfaces is deep-rooted
in the presented methodologies, since this proves vital to precisely describe
the gear pair kinematics but also to correctly include all the relevant complex
contact phenomena. However, a reference tooth profile, similar to the involute for
cylindrical gears, does not exist for spiral bevel gears. Therefore, a mathematical
model that simulates the cutting kinematics of the manufacturing process,
proves to be indispensable to correctly capture both the gear teeth’s macro- and
microgeometry. In this work the five-cut face-milling cutting process is adopted
to create a representative geometry of a face-milled spiral bevel gear set.
Contact detection based on the tooth flank’s surface of roll angles, combined
with the ease-off topography, has been proposed in the gear literature to reduce
the computational load, associated with the contact search. Yet, the ease-off
topography, which quantifies the geometrical mismatch of a pair of contacting
gear tooth surfaces, shows to hold limitations when moving beyond componentlevel
contact analysis, as it is sensitive to the instantaneous gear pair installment.
With the underlying idea of potential application of the presented methodologies
within multibody system simulation, the usage of ease-off topography concept
for contact detection is abandoned and replaced by a penetration-based contact
model. An analytical compliance model is formulated to translate the detected
penetrations into appropriate contact loads. The compliance model separates
the linear gear tooth deflection components from a tooth pair’s local nonlinear
deformation, which arises around the contact zone.
The developed gear contact model with surfaces of roll angles, computed for the
gear pair’s actual tooth flanks in the absence of misalignments, is then shown
to be well capable of predicting a misaligned gear pair’s contact performance.
In contrast, ease-off based contact models would require an update of the
(misaligned) ease-off topography, each time the gear pair’s configuration changes
(e.g. due to system-induced deflections), reducing their otherwise excellent
computational efficiency. The proposed penetration-based gear contact model
identifies the contact locations based on the surface of roll angles but computes
the flank mismatch based on the instantaneous position and orientation of the
real gear tooth surfaces, showing to be more robust to configurational changes.
Finally, a strategy to parametrically redefine the gear contact model’s surfaces
of roll angles in function of the instantaneous misaligned state of the gear pair,
is proposed to further increase the accuracy of the contact detection.
A prototype toolchain is created around the presented techniques for contact
modeling, covering the various analyses for unloaded and loaded tooth contact
analysis that are an essential part of today’s spiral bevel gear design process.
Automated finite element model creation routines are developed to support the
validation of the methods against nonlinear FEM-based contact simulations.
These tools will greatly support future research into methodological advances; Università della Calabria.Soggetto
Contact mechanics; Gearing
Relazione
ING-IND/13;