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Determining inductive sensor wear debris limits for rolling contact fatigue of bearings

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:15 authored by Andrew Becker, Sylvester AbanteribaSylvester Abanteriba, David Forrester
A relatively recent development for the condition monitoring of oil-wetted machinery has been the in-line full-flow inductive wear debris sensor (hereafter referred to as inductive wear debris sensors). These sensors detect a disturbance to a magnetic field caused by metallic wear debris shed from deteriorating dynamic components that is entrained in the lubricant. Applications for these sensors currently include (but are not limited to) aviation machinery, wind-turbine generators, marine propulsion systems, and locomotives. Inductive wear debris sensors can distinguish between ferromagnetic and nonferromagnetic particles as well as providing size and other related information. One of the primary advantages of this sensor type is that the detectable size range is broad and may be used to track the progress of an incipient failure such as the rolling contact fatigue of a bearing or gear as it occurs. One aspect that has received little attention in the literature is the methodology for determining a suitable limit for a particular application. Limits are a critically important aspect of machinery condition monitoring and need to be established by a robust and reliable method otherwise unnecessary maintenance can occur or an incipient fault may be missed. This paper describes a generic method for determining a physically meaningful debris limit for a deteriorating rolling element bearing when utilizing an inductive wear debris sensor.

History

Journal

Journal of Engineering Tribology

Volume

229

Issue

6

Start page

698

End page

711

Total pages

14

Publisher

Sage Publications

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 by Institution of Mechanical Engineers

Former Identifier

2006049731

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-28